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By: Kenny Shepard, Andrew Jacoby, Lucy Jarvis, Samer Jaara
•End Of The Great Depression •WWII•Fair Deal•Employment act 1946
•War productions board•Women in the workplace
•Office Of Price Administration
•The Korean War took place between 1950 and 1953.
•The Korean War occurred because Communist and
Non-Communist parties had many conflicts.
•There was much instability in consumer spending during 1950-1951.
•Consumer expenditures were primarily a function of real income that became widely accepted during the time of the
Korean War.•The war not only affected Korea, but the United States’
consumer spending as well.
•Research shows, from Gross Domestic Product (GDP) rates, that the economy of the United States was not as bad during the Korean War as it was in World War
II.•However, the shares of Gross National Product (GNP) devoted to security expenditures, were very similar in
1941 and 1951.
•The tactic of the United States was to have a defense mobilization that would have a stimulus to economic expansion if government expenditures increased the
aggregate demand for goods and services.•However, the announcement of the mobilization plan
stimulated the expansion of the economy and was a huge influence throughout the Korean War.
•Consumer spending increased immediately following the invasion of South Korea.
•In July, 1950, retail sales went up 9%, while many other sales rose higher.
•A few stocks reduced slightly because of the immediate purchases all across the country.
•Research shows that while retail and other sales increased, personal income was not increasing at
the same rate. •The annual personal savings rate declined by
60% within the first six months of the Korean War.
•The third quarter of 1950 had the most consumer expenditures for the period of the
Korean War.•Consumer spending would increase from time to time when a new campaign would
come out about the war.
•Still prosperity from early 40’s•Recession of 1953•JFK
Vietnam War (1959-1975)North(communist) South(capitalist)Manufacturing AgricultureCoal Rice
Loss of thousands of skilled workers
Post WarCentrally planned economy converted to a socialist-oriented market economy
Growth Rate ~8%
CIA funded covert operations by smuggling opium into the United States (American Gangster)
Strict Drug Laws now
Afghanistan1/3 of income from opium(heroin) source of 80% of world heroin supply
VietnamGDP per capita-$2,800Below poverty-7.8%Unemployment-4.9%
AfghanistanGDP per capita-$457Below poverty-53%Unemployment-40%
VietnamShrimp, Catfish, Shoes, Rice, Logging
AfghanistanWheat, Cereal, Opium
1990’s BoomSept 11 attacks
•Largest and most powerful economy
•US firms are at or near the forefront in technological advances, especially in computers and in medical, aerospace, and military equipment
•GDP: $14.25 trillion (2009 est.)•Exports: $994.7 billion •Imports: $1.445 trillion•Dept: $13.45 trillion
Inadequate investment in economic infrastructure, rapidly rising medical and pension costs of an aging population, sizable trade and budget deficits, and stagnation of family income in the lower economic groups. The global economic downturn, the sub-prime mortgage crisis, investment bank failures, falling home prices, and tight credit
•Recovering from decades of conflict
•Improved since the fall of the Taliban
•Poor, landlocked, and highly dependent
International assistance
Recovery of agriculture, and service sector growth
Build a stronger government
•GDP: $23.35 Billion (2009 est.)
•Exports: $603 Million
•Imports: $ 8.27 Billion
•Dept: 8 Billion
•Other long-term challenges include:•Budget sustainability •Job creation•Eliminate corruption•Government capacity •Rebuilding war torn infrastructure
•Continue to aid Afghanistan•Improve their agricultural output by educating about farming machinery, chemical fertilizer, or pesticides•Encourage farmers to stick to wheat farming through financial incentives to discourage opium farming