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The End of Prosperity: The American Economy in the 1970s.
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1978
Year
EconomicsPublic PolicyEconomic InequalityWorld Economic HistoryHarry MagdoffAmerican EconomyPolitical EconomyEconomic AnalysisEconomic HistoryCapitalist EconomiesLate 1960SBusinessEconomic ChangeEconomic GrowthPolitical ScienceSocial SciencesWorld-systems TheoryMonthly Review
This is the second in the series of four collections of essays in which Paul M. Sweezy and Harry Magdoff, the editors of Monthly Review, set out as it took place the development of U.S. and global capitalism from the late 1960s to the financial explosion of the early 1990s and after. This second set of essays constitute in their totality a probing analysis of the condition of the United States economy in the 1970s, immediately after the end of the golden age of capitalism. The authors concluded, correctly, that a new period had begun-one of sluggish capitalist accumulation and unemployment in the advanced capitalist countries on a scale not seen since the 1930s.