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The pillars of Reagan's economic policy included increasing defense spending, balancing the federal budget and slowing the growth of government spending, reducing the federal income tax and capital gains tax, reducing government regulation, and tightening the money supply in order to reduce inflation. [7] The results of Reaganomics are still ...
Milton Friedman, the monetarist economist who was an intellectual architect of free-market policies, was a primary influence on Reagan. [4] When Reagan took office, the country faced the highest rate of inflation since 1947 (average annual rate of 13.5% in 1980), and interest rates as high as 13% (the Fed funds rate in December 1980).
Uploaded a work by President Ronald Reagan and various United States Government employees from National Archives - Ronald Reagan Library with UploadWizard File usage No pages on the English Wikipedia use this file (pages on other projects are not listed).
If the file has been modified from its original state, some details may not fully reflect the modified file. Short title A national TV address by Ronald Reagan attacks Ford's economic, foreign, and military defense policies and raises vast sums ($1.5 million) for Reagan's continued campaign
The Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1981 is the federal budget enacted by the 97th United States Congress and signed into law by U.S. President Ronald Reagan.The bill established federal expenditures for fiscal year 1982, which ran from 1 October 1981 through 30 September 1982.
Reagan was first elected in 1980, when the U.S. gross domestic product fell 0.3%, according to data from the World Bank. During his first year in office (1981) the GDP grew 2.5%, but during his ...
Ronald Reagan's economic policies, dubbed "Reaganomics" by opponents, included large tax cuts and were characterized as trickle-down economics.In this picture, he is outlining his plan for the Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981 from the Oval Office in a televised address, July 1981.
Reagan referred to the "genocide of the Armenians" in a 1981 statement commemorating the liberation of the Nazi death camps. [187] Reagan was the first U.S. president to personally use the term "genocide" to reference the systematic eradication of the Armenian people at the hands of the Ottoman Empire between 1915 and 1923. [188]