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American economic development since 1945 : growth, decline, and rejuvenation / Samuel Rosenberg.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Contemporary United States (Palgrave Macmillan (Firm))Publisher: Basingstoke ; New York : Palgrave Macmillan, [2003]Copyright date: ©2003Description: xii, 339 pages ; 23 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 0333345339
  • 9780333345337
  • 0333345347
  • 9780333345344
Other title:
  • American economic development since nineteen forty five
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 330.973092 21
Contents:
Pt. I. Introduction -- 1. Economic Mobilization for Survival, 1940-45 -- Pt. II. The Making of an Institutional Framework, 1945-60 -- 2. Macroeconomic Policy, Economic Instability and Economic Growth -- 3. Business-Labor Relations: Conflict Amidst Stability -- 4. From Dollar Shortage to Dollar Glut -- Pt. III. Strains Developing Within the Institutional Framework, 1960-71 -- 5. From Guideposts to Controls: The Rise and Fall of Keynesian Demand Management Policy -- 6. Standoff at the Workplace -- 7. The Persistence of Inequality and the Limits of Liberal Policy -- 8. The Dollar: No Longer as Good as Gold -- Pt. IV. The Unmaking of an Institutional Framework and the Recreation of Another, 1971-2000 -- 9. Stagflation, 1971-80 -- 10. The Economic and Political Stalemate, 1971-80 -- 11. Restructuring the Economy: The Market-Based Conservative Strategy, 1981-92 -- 12. Toward the Twenty-First Century: A Reinvigorated Economy, 1993-2000.
Summary: "This clearly-written book provides an historical analysis of postwar economic development in the US, helping the reader to understand the nation's current economic position. Samuel Rosenberg investigates three postwar phases: the creation of an institutional framework setting the stage for prosperity in the US after World War II, the forces undermining this institutional framework and the resulting stagflation of the 1970s, and the recreation of a new institutional structure in the 1980s. Basic economic concepts are introduced and explained throughout and specific attention is paid to macroeconomic policy, industrial relations, the role of the US in the world economy, social and labor policy, the structure of the labor force, and the distribution of income by race and gender."--Publisher description.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book City Campus City Campus Main Collection 330.973092 ROS (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available A259700B

Includes bibliographical references (pages 313-326) and index.

Pt. I. Introduction -- 1. Economic Mobilization for Survival, 1940-45 -- Pt. II. The Making of an Institutional Framework, 1945-60 -- 2. Macroeconomic Policy, Economic Instability and Economic Growth -- 3. Business-Labor Relations: Conflict Amidst Stability -- 4. From Dollar Shortage to Dollar Glut -- Pt. III. Strains Developing Within the Institutional Framework, 1960-71 -- 5. From Guideposts to Controls: The Rise and Fall of Keynesian Demand Management Policy -- 6. Standoff at the Workplace -- 7. The Persistence of Inequality and the Limits of Liberal Policy -- 8. The Dollar: No Longer as Good as Gold -- Pt. IV. The Unmaking of an Institutional Framework and the Recreation of Another, 1971-2000 -- 9. Stagflation, 1971-80 -- 10. The Economic and Political Stalemate, 1971-80 -- 11. Restructuring the Economy: The Market-Based Conservative Strategy, 1981-92 -- 12. Toward the Twenty-First Century: A Reinvigorated Economy, 1993-2000.

"This clearly-written book provides an historical analysis of postwar economic development in the US, helping the reader to understand the nation's current economic position. Samuel Rosenberg investigates three postwar phases: the creation of an institutional framework setting the stage for prosperity in the US after World War II, the forces undermining this institutional framework and the resulting stagflation of the 1970s, and the recreation of a new institutional structure in the 1980s. Basic economic concepts are introduced and explained throughout and specific attention is paid to macroeconomic policy, industrial relations, the role of the US in the world economy, social and labor policy, the structure of the labor force, and the distribution of income by race and gender."--Publisher description.

Machine converted from AACR2 source record.

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