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Chapter 1 A Brief Economic History of the United States The National Railroad Network • The completion of the transcontinental railroads – 1850 The United States had 10,000 miles of track – 1890 The United States had 164,000 miles of track • This made possible mass production, mass marketing, and mass consumption, which brought the country together into a huge social and economic unit • This made it possible to go almost anywhere in the U.S. by train except in the south (i.e., transcontinental lines by-passed the south – This severely retarded its economic development well into the 20th century The Age of the Industrial Capitalist • The last quarter of the 19th century was the age of the industrial capitalist – – – – – Carnegie (steel) Du Pont (chemicals) McCormick (farm equipment) Rockefeller (oil) Swift (meat packing) Industrial Development • By the turn of the 20th century – America was primarily an industrial economy • Fewer than 4 of 10 people lived on farms • The U.S. was among the world leaders in production of steel, coal, steamships, textiles, apparel, chemicals, and agricultural machinery The Great Depression • Started with the August 1929 recession – Had the stock market not crashed and had the federal government acted more quickly, this could have been a fairly short recession • The economy hit bottom in March, 1933 – National output was one third what it was in 1929 – Official unemployment was 25 percent – 16 million Americans were out of work • The population was less than ½ its present size The Recession of 1937-38 • A lot of credit goes to Franklin D. Roosevelt’s “New Deal” administration for the 1933 – 1937 expansion – Banks were reopened – The Government confiscated America’s gold – The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) came into being – The Federal Deposit Insurance Commission (FDIC) was set up – An unemployment insurance benefit program was started – The Social Security System was started • This was the most significant reform What Went Wrong? • The Federal Reserve greatly tightened credit – This reduced the money supply • The Roosevelt administration suddenly got the urge to balance the budget – This would have made sense during an economic boom but not when the unemployment rate was 12% – This caused • Industrial production to fall by 30% • Five million more people to be put out of work What Went Wrong? (Continued) • In April, 1938 the Federal Reserve and the Roosevelt Administration reversed course • War broke out in Europe • America mobilized in 1940 – 41 and then entered the war on December 7, 1941 • America was back on the road to recovery What Finally Brought the United States Out of the Great Depression? • The massive federal government spending that was needed to prepare for and fight World War II? – This was deficit spending (borrowed money) – In other words the federal budget ran a deficit The End World War II • The country that emerged from WW II was very different from what it had been four years earlier – Prosperity had replaced depression – Inflation was now the number one economic problem – The U.S. accounted for ½ of the world’s manufacturing output • With just 7 percent of the world’s population – The U.S. and the Soviet Union were the only superpowers left standing The Suburbanization of America After WW II • Twelve million men and several hundred thousand women returned to civilian lives • There was a tremendous shortage of housing • The V.A. offered affordable mortgages – One percent interest and nothing down – The FHA supplemented this need • The only place to build was outside cities – This required roads and cars – The Federal Government subsidized an interstate highway network along with state freeways, state highways, roads, and local streets 1940s and 1950s • One big construction boom • The automobile industry prospered – Supplied America’s pent up demand and became the world’s leading exporter of cars • Birth rates shot up • Congress passed the G.I. Bill of Rights (1944) – Provided loans for home mortgages, business, and education The 1950s: The Eisenhower Years • The advent of television and the Korean War stimulated the economy • The Eisenhower administration – Ended the Korean War and inflation – Made no attempt to undo the legacies of the New Deal – The role of the federal government as a major economic player became a permanent one The Soaring Sixties: The Years of Kennedy and Johnson • The country was in recession when Kennedy was elected – He was assassinated and replaced by Johnson in 1963 • Johnson enacted a tax cut planned by Kennedy – The tax cut and the spending on the Vietnam war ended the recession • The federal budget deficit and the money supply grew • Inflation began and lasted until the mid-80s The Soaring Sixties: The Years of Kennedy and Johnson (Continued) • Johnson enacted three programs in 1965 that would have profound long-term effects – Medicare – Medicaid – Food stamps The Sagging Seventies: The Stagflation Decade • Nixon became President in 1968 • The decade began with the problems of inflation and ending the Vietnam war – Wage and price controls were initiated – Ford became President when Nixon resigned The Sagging Seventies: The Stagflation Decade (Continued) • 1973 Economic disaster began – OPEC quadrupled oil prices – The U.S. was hit by the worst recession since the 1930s – The U.S. faced double digit inflation • The U.S. experienced stagflation – Economic stagnation + inflation The Sagging Seventies: The Stagflation Decade (Continued) • Jimmy Carter was President in 1976 – – – – He presided over mounting budget deficits The money supply grew rapidly Inflation rose almost to double digit levels He faced the Iranian revolution in 1979 • Gasoline prices went through the ceiling • In October, 1979 the Fed stopped the growth of the money supply – By January, 1980 the country was in recession • The inflation rate was 18 percent • The nation’s productivity growth was at one percent, one third the postwar rate The1980s: The Age of Reagan • Supply-Side vs. Keynesian economics – The objective of both is to stimulate output • Keynesian economics – The government should spend more money – This would give business the incentive to produce more • Supply-Side economics – The government should cut tax rates – Consumers would then have • More incentive to work • More of their own money to spend and business would produce more The1980s: The Age of Reagan (Continued) • The country was in a severe recession 1981 • • • • It was the worst since WW II Unemployment reached nearly 11 percent in 1982 Inflation had been brought under control Unemployment rates began falling – They seemed to stick around 6 percent – Deficits were a problem: $79 billion in 1981 and $290 billion in 1992 – Personal income taxes were cut – Business taxes were cut The “New Economy” of the Nineties • It was a decade of major technological change – Marked by low inflation, low unemployment, and rapidly growing productivity – The 1920s and the 1960s could be similarly described – One of the most prosperous decades ever – The stock market soared • The length of the economic expansion ended in March, 2001 (a period of 120 months) an all-time record The “New Economy” of the Nineties (Continued) • The last two decades our economy has become increasingly integrated with the global economy • This has resulted in – An exodus of jobs making shoes, electronics, toys and clothing to developing countries – Service work like writing software code and processing credit card receipts shifted to low-wage countries – White collar jobs now moving offshore – Routine service and engineering tasks are now going to India, China, and Russia • Educated workers are paid a fraction of what their American counterparts earn The “American Economy” in the New Millennium • 2001 was not a good year for America – March, 2001 the 10 year economic expansion ended (a recession started) – The stock market started down – Unemployment began to creep up – 9/11 occurred – Unbridled optimism gave way to uncertainty • 2003 the war with Iraq began