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Ford and Carter - Chapter 27, Section 3 By Mr. Thomas Parsons.

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1 Ford and Carter - Chapter 27, Section 3 By Mr. Thomas Parsons

2 I. The Economic Crisis of the 1970s A.During the 1970’s, America’s economic boom turned into a decade of hard times. B.The economic troubles began under Lyndon Johnson’s leadership. 1.He increased federal deficit spending to fund the Vietnam War and the Great Society program without raising taxes. 2.Pumping large amounts of money into the economy created inflation, or a rise in the cost of goods.

3 C.The 1973 Oil Embargo 1.In 1973 the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) announced an embargo (Trade ban on petroleum) 2.It was directed to countries that supported Israel. 3.The price of a barrel of crude oil increased from $3 in 1973 to $30 in 1980.

4 D.High prices for gasoline and home heating oil led to a recession 1.Americans had less money to spend on other goods 2.Lack of consumer spending caused production to slow 3.Layoffs and factory shut downs were common 4.The US Auto industry was hard hit

5 E.Foreign Competition 1.Increased international competition for manufactured goods added to the economic problems. 2.U.S. factories closed, and workers lost their jobs. 3.The U.S. economy faced stagflation- the economic dilemma that combined rising prices with economic stagnation. 4.Nixon focused on controlling inflation by cutting spending and raising taxes. 5.Congress and many Americans opposed Nixon’s idea of a tax hike, as well as his other ideas on how to end stagflation.

6 II. Ford Takes Over A.On September 8, 1974, President Gerald Ford granted a full pardon to Richard Nixon.  Ford’s approval rating plunged from 71% to 50%.

7 B.Recession 1.By 1975 the American economy was in its worst recession since the Great Depression. 2.Ford attempted to revive the economy, but his Whip Inflation Now (WIN) plan failed. 3.He tried to limit federal authority, balance the budget, and keep taxes low. 4.He also vetoed more than 50 bills that congress had passed during the first two years Ford had served there.

8 C.Ford continued the foreign policy of Nixon. 1.In August 1975, Ford met with leaders of NATO and the Warsaw Pact to sign the Helsinki Accords. 2.Under the accords, the parties recognized the borders of Eastern Europe established at the end of World War II. 3.The Soviets promised to uphold certain basic human rights but later went back on this promise 4.This turned many Americans against détente. 5.Southeast Asia also continued to be a concern for Ford when Cambodia seized an American cargo ship, the Mayaguez.

9 D.1976 Presidential Election – 1.Republicans – Attempted to elect Ford 2.Democratics - Georgian Governor Jimmy Carter 1.Carter was seen as a person of high morals and an upstanding personality. 2.Watergate and the economy turned the election to Carter 3.Carter won with 50.1% of the popular vote.

10 III. Carter Battles the Economic Crisis A.President Carter focused most of his attention on the energy crisis 1.Carter proposed a national energy program to conserve oil and to promote the use of coal and renewable energy sources. 2.He had Congress create the Department of Energy. 3.He asked Americans to reduce energy consumption, which most Americans ignored. 4.Interstate Speed Limits were lowered to 55 MPH

11 B.Carter was unsuccessful 1.Why did he fail solving the economic problems?  Scholars have suggested that Carter’s difficulties in solving the nation’s economic problems were the result of his lack of leadership and inability to work with Congress. 2.A 1979 public opinion poll showed that Carter’s popularity had dropped lower than President Nixon’s rating during Watergate.

12 IV. Carter’s Foreign Policy A.President Carter’s foreign policy focused on human rights. B.The Panama Canal A.Carter won Senate ratification of two Panama Canal treaties B.These treaties transferred control of the Canal to Panama on December 31, 1999. C.This ended 97 years of US control

13 C.US Soviet Relations Hardened 1.President Carter singled out the Soviet Union as a violator of human rights because of its practice of imprisoning people who protested against the government. 2.Tensions deepened as the Soviet Union invaded the Central Asian nation of Afghanistan in December 1979. 3.Carter responded with an embargo on grain to the Soviet Union and a boycott of the Summer Olympic Games in Moscow.

14 D.The Camp David Accords 1.In 1978 Carter helped get a historic peace treaty, known as the Camp David Accords, signed between Israel and Egypt. 2.Ended 40 years of war between Egypt and Israel 3.First and only Arab Israel peace treaty. 4.Most Arab nations in the region opposed the treaty 5.It marked the first step toward peace in the Middle East.

15 C.The Iranian Crisis 1.In 1979 Iran’s monarch, the Shah, was forced to flee 2.An Islamic republic was declared. 3.The Shah was supported by the United States. 4.The religious leader Ayatollah Khomeini ordered revolutionaries to enter the American embassy in Tehran 5.52 Americans were taken hostage. 6.The hostages would not be released until Carter’s last day in office, some 444 days in captivity. 7.Carter lost re-election to Ronald Reagan in 1981.


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