From Publishers Weekly
Wall Street Journal editor Bartley here extols economic policies of the Reagan years and calls for more of the same. Tracing the pre-Reagan "stagflation" produced by Nixon's price controls, Ford's WIN campaign and Carter's "voluntary" price guidelines, the author tracks how 1980s tax cuts and deregulation, combined with Federal Reserve chief Paul Volcker's inflation-curbing money controls, unleashed American enterprise and boosted national production 30% with a 20% rise in per capita income. In extraordinary detail, and with frequent ironical jabs at the "unenlightened," Bartley analyzes (among other things) congressional economic attitudes (mostly awful), foreign trade debits (complex but necessary), the federal deficit (not to worry), the savings-and-loan debacle (the New Deal started it), mergers, acquisitions and junk bonds (not so bad, really) and the fallacy of "fairly" taxing the rich. He puts in a good word, too, for Jay Gould and other maligned 19th-century "robber barons" for their roles in our economic expansion.
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From Library Journal
This is a history and unabashed defense of supply-side economics and the Reagan economic revolution of 1982-89 by the editor of The Wall Street Journal . His basic thesis is that the "Seven Fat Years" can be reproduced for an indefinite period if we simply return to the lower taxes of supply-side economics (or "the new classical economics," as Bartley prefers to call it). Further, he believes that with the United States now the sole superpower and its standard of living the envy of the world it can provide the economic leadership for a worldwide "belle epoque." "The moral of the Seven Fat Years is that economic growth counts." In addition to his arguments for supply-side economics, Bartley provides an interesting history of the development of that school of thought in the 1970s under the intellectual leadership of such figures as Arthur Laffer, Robert Mundell, and Jack Kemp. Recommended for academic and public libraries.
- Jeffrey R. Herold, Bucyrus P.L., OhioCopyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.