business borrowing slowed abruptly. The economy soon fell into a deep recession.
The Economy in the 1980s The nation endured a deep recession throughout 1982. Business bankruptcies rose 50
percent over the previous year. Farmers were especially hard hit, as agricultural exports declined, crop prices
fell, and interest rates rose. But while the medicine of a sharp slowdown was hard to swallow, it did break the
destructive cycle in which the economy had been caught. By 1983, inflation had eased, the economy had rebounded,
and the United States began a sustained period of economic growth. The annual inflation rate remained under 5
percent throughout most of the 1980s and into the 1990s. The economic upheaval of the 1970s had important political
consequences. The American people expressed their discontent with federal policies by turning out Carter in 1980
and electing former Hollywood actor and California governor Ronald Reagan as president. Reagan (1981-1989) based
his economic program on the theory of supply-side economics, which advocated reducing tax rates so people could
keep more of what they earned. The theory was that lower tax rates would induce people to work harder and longer,
and that this in turn would lead to more saving and investment, resulting in more production and stimulating
overall economic growth. While the Reagan-inspired tax cuts served mainly to benefit wealthier Americans, the
economic theory behind the cuts argued that benefits would extend to lower-income people as well because higher
investment would lead new job opportunities and higher wages. The central theme of Reagan's national agenda,
however, was his belief that the federal government had become too big and intrusive. In the early 1980s, while he
was cutting taxes, Reagan was also slashing social programs. Reagan also undertook a campaign throughout his tenure
to reduce or eliminate government regulations affecting the consumer, the workplace, and the environment. At the
same time, however, he feared that the United States had 35
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