Huge monetary and fiscal decisions in our modern era have pretty much twisted and squirmed to set our current economic stage. We’ve ignored general economic principles – perhaps no one greater than the “guns or butter” maximum (read: you can have lower taxes or widespread military conflict, but not at the same time) – and paved new economic ground. I generally look at “modern” as post-World War II.
Post WWII United States benefitted greatly by the pre-war New Deal focus on infrastructure, particularly our over-building hydro-electric generating capacity with a surfeit of dams. After the war, we were the only large, developed nation left largely unscarred by bombing and artillery damage. Our factories went into overdrive, returning GIs had “benefits” that generated affordable home ownership and college educations, and unions provided workers paid well enough to become middle class consumers. While most of the rest of the world was engaged in rebuilding, Americans were digging into consuming. In 1957, President Eisenhower (R) signed the National Highway Defense Act which began our incredibly significant economically productive Interstate Highway System.
The Korean War could have been a huge drain on our economy, but it lasted only three years. It ended in 1953, and while the Vietnam War technically began two years later, American involvement did not “escalate” into significant involvement until 1964. It did not end until the fall of Saigon eleven years later. But we began some nasty economic habits that became routine. As the cost of spending rose, government domestic entitlements and military costs rose, but taxes were cut. Nixon’s Tax Reform Act of 1969 did not pare a lot of income tax – indeed his alternative minimum tax even taxed a few rich folks more – but it still represented a cut at a time when we were still at war. Butter and guns. Vietnam began our slow march toward massive federal deficits. But Nixon also implemented a policy that changed the economic complexion of global trade forever.
We take a global economy for granted today, but… “At the end of the Second World War, there was literally no functioning global economy, so nations got together to create a new trading system and a new monetary system. That monetary system was devised in a town in New Hampshire called Bretton Woods, so it was called the Bretton Woods Agreement. One of the key elements was that the dollar would be pegged to gold at $35 an ounce. Other central banks could exchange the dollars they held for gold. In that sense, the dollar was as good as gold. Every other currency had a fixed exchange rate to the dollar.
“They established the dollar-gold standard to create some predictability and stability for global commerce. For the next 25 years, it was a tremendous success… When the Nixon administration came into office in 1969, they realize that the world economy had grown very, very big. Everybody wanted dollars, so the Federal Reserve was printing lots of dollars. As a result, there were four times as many dollars in circulation as there was gold in reserves.
“The rate of $35 for an ounce of gold was good in 1944, but it hadn’t changed, so by 1971 the dollar was really overvalued. That meant imports were very cheap, and exports were very expensive. We experienced our first trade deficit since the 19th century. We were experiencing employment problems. For the first time, the U.S. started to talk about losing competitiveness…
“On top of all that, there was the beginning of inflation. If it continued long enough, dollars would be worth less than they were before. The Nixon Administration was afraid that other countries were going to ask for gold and the U.S. wouldn’t have it. That would have been an enormous humiliation and a breaking of their commitment to exchange gold for dollars…
“In August 1971, President Nixon took his top economic advisors to Camp David. Over three days, they made the radical and momentous decision to cut the dollar loose from gold. In the process, they unilaterally changed the whole global monetary system… Nixon masterfully created a situation where suddenly countries understood that they needed coordinated policies to deal with finance, trade, energy, and food. We entered a period of enormous international cooperation on the heels of this very tough decision that Nixon made at Camp David.” Author and Yale School of Management Dean Emeritus, Jeffrey Garten in the July 19th Yale Insights. But delinking the dollar from a tangible value also enabled a new era of deficit spending.
As the Soviet Union began to crumble, President Ronald Reagan began his supply side/trickle down tax policy, a platform that would become an immutable, even when thoroughly discredited, core vector of the Republican Party for all the years that followed, well into the present day. “In 1980 Reagan promised those cuts and over his next 2 terms, he cut taxes to the lowest since the 1920s when the top Personal Income Tax rates were lowered from 73% to 25% in the Revenue Act of 1921, the Revenue Act of 1924, and the Revenue Act of 1926. When the tax cuts were finally put into the tax code, one of the longest peacetime expansions in history began… [while t]he budget deficit increased from $74 billion in 1980 to $221 billion in 1990.” Wikipedia. The tax code needed adjusting, and efforts seemed to pay off… at first. But we were effectively living on borrowed money. America was beginning an addiction to quick fixes that would have serious repercussions for years to come.
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