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Published byMorgan Hart Modified over 8 years ago
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21 September 2015 by Sigrid Brevik Wangsness
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I. 18 th Century Economic reasons for the War of Independence (1775-1783) Agriculture as the main economic activity
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The Industrial Revolution and development of a modern economy How can we explain the tremendous growth of the US economy since the early 19 th century? 16 The free-enterprise system (Adam Smith) 27 38 49 510
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Focus on opportunity to succeed through: 1. 2. 3. 4.
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◦ Poor immigrant from Scotland ◦ From factory worker to one of the richest men in the world ◦ Founded a steel company, consolidated the steel industry ◦ A philanthropist
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Development of corporations a) Why did corporations replace many family businesses and partnerships in the US? b) How did the giant corporations develop? b) Consolidation in major industries: oil, steel, railroads
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To what extent did the US government intervene in the economy in the 20 th century? 1. Early 20 th century o Tariffs o Trust busting o 1913: The Federal Reserve (The Fed)
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2. The Roaring 20s o Growth in mass production and consumption o Prohibition o Speculation on the stock market 3. The crash in October 1929 o Why? 4.The Depression of the 1930s o 25% unemployment, extreme poverty
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5. The New Deal o The election of Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1932 Creating jobs Social Security Regulation of finance o The three Rs: Relief Recovery Reform
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Roosevelt was influenced by a new economic theory: A managed economy John Keynes: The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money (1937)
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6. World War II o Government control of large parts of the economy o Full employment o Consensus 7. The Post-War Period How has Big Business profited from co- operation with the US government?
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Major growth of the US economy from 1945-1970 World economic dominance Sustained growth in the 50s and 60s Consolidation in the 60s
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Mid-1970s: Stagflation and recession New economic theory: Monetarism Milton Friedman – the ”Chicago school” of economics ”Supply-side” economic theory (1970s/80s)
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1980s: The decade of the Yuppies Economic growth, but at a slower pace towards the end of the period. Ronald Reagan: 1980-88
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Continued shift in the workforce from manufacturing to services and high-tech. Declining number of workers, but increased production and efficiency. Development of conglomerates and multinationals.
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From being the world’s biggest creditor the US became the biggest debtor. Foreign investment inside the USA became greater than US investment abroad. Deregulation: fewer restrictions and less government intervention 1987: Stock market crash. World recession
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1990 - 1992: Recession. George Bush Sr. Signs of recovery at the end of his term. 1993 - 2000: Growth. Boom. Bill Clinton. Eight years of uninterrupted growth. Signs of decline at the end of his term.
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2000/2001: "The new economy” (dot.com shares) "A bubble economy”? The IT bubble burst: Prices of IT shares dropped dramatically A major slowdown of the US economy Sectors of the economy sliding into recession
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September 11 th 2001 2002 - early 2003: Signs of recovery, but sluggish 2003 - 2007:Relative growth (GDP: 2.6% in 2007), stability and relatively low unemployment (4.7% in 2007).
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2008 – 2009: Financial crisis. Recession 2009 - 2013: Slow recovery 2014: 2.5% growth, but economic data difficult to interpret. 2015: Better than it looks?
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