Combined with low inflation and low unemployment, strong profits sent the stock market surging; the Dow Jones
Industrial Average, which had stood at just 1,000 in the late 1970s, hit the 11,000 mark in 1999, adding
substantially to the wealth of many -- though not all -- Americans. Japan's economy, often considered a model by
Americans in the 1980s, fell into a prolonged recession -- a development that led many economists to conclude that
the more flexible, less planned, and more competitive American approach was, in fact, a better strategy for
economic growth in the new, globally-integrated environment. America's labor force changed markedly during the
1990s. Continuing a long-term trend, the number of farmers declined. A small portion of workers had jobs in
industry, while a much greater share worked in the service sector, in jobs ranging from store clerks to financial
planners. If steel and shoes were no longer American manufacturing mainstays, computers and the software that make
them run were. After peaking at $290,000 million in 1992, the federal budget steadily shrank as economic growth
increased tax revenues. In 1998, the government posted its first surplus in 30 years, although a huge debt --
mainly in the form of promised 38
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