Asia, which had grown especially rapidly during the 1980s, joined Europe as a major supplier of finished goods
and a market for American exports. Sophisticated worldwide telecommunications systems linked the world's financial
markets in a way unimaginable even a few years earlier. While many Americans remained convinced that global
economic integration benefited all nations, the growing interdependence created some dislocations as well. Workers
in high-technology industries -- at which the United States excelled -- fared rather well, but competition from
many foreign countries that generally had lower labor costs tended to dampen wages in traditional manufacturing
industries. Then, when the economies of Japan and other newly industrialized countries in Asia faltered in the late
1990s, shock waves rippled throughout the global financial system. American economic policy-makers found they
increasingly had to weigh global economic conditions in charting a course for the domestic economy. Still,
Americans ended the 1990s with a restored sense of confidence. By the end of 1999, the economy had grown
continuously since March 1991, the longest peacetime economic expansion in history. Unemployment totaled just 4.1
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