Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Reagan gives a televised address from the Oval Office, outlining his plan for tax reductions in July 1981.. Reaganomics (/ r eɪ ɡ ə ˈ n ɒ m ɪ k s / ⓘ; a portmanteau of Reagan and economics attributed to Paul Harvey), [1] or Reaganism, were the neoliberal [2] [3] [4] economic policies promoted by U.S. President Ronald Reagan during the 1980s.
Major examples of what critics have called "trickle-down economics" in the US include the Reagan tax cuts, [5] the Bush tax cuts, [6] and the Trump tax cuts. [7] Major UK examples include Margaret Thatcher's economic policies in the 1980s and Liz Truss's mini-budget tax cuts of 2022, [8] which was an attempt to revive such Thatcherite policies. [9]
[6] [16] [17] Real GDP growth recovered throughout Reagan's term, averaging +3.5% per year, with a high of +7.3% in 1984. [18] The average annual GDP growth during Reagan's presidency was the fifth highest since the Great Depression and the highest of any Republican president.
When Carter met with Mike Wallace in 1985, the former president said he was "not really" jealous of Reagan and what Wallace described as Reagan's "teflon presidency." Carter, for comparison, had a ...
That didn’t happen during the final two years of Reagan’s first term — in fact, it was quite the opposite. The U.S. economy grew by 4.6% in 1983 and another 7.2% in 1984.
President Reagan, shown in 1981, based many of his policies on ideas from the Heritage Foundation publication "The Mandate for Leadership." Project 2025 makes up a majority of the latest edition ...
The term "supply-side economics" was thought for some time to have been coined by the journalist Jude Wanniski in 1975; according to Robert D. Atkinson, the term "supply side" was first used in 1976 by Herbert Stein (a former economic adviser to President Richard Nixon) and only later that year was this term repeated by Jude Wanniski. [16]
The term is rarely used by proponents of free-market policies. [27] When the term entered into common academic use during the 1980s in association with Augusto Pinochet's economic reforms in Chile, it quickly acquired negative connotations and was employed principally by critics of market reform and laissez-faire capitalism.