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The Cold War Begins

The Cold War Begins. Chapter 36. Post War Economic Anxiety. After war many Americans worried that economy would slip back into depression. At first these predictions seemed to be coming true GNP dropped in ‘46 and ’47 Prices rose by 33% in ’46-47. Strikes swept key industries.

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The Cold War Begins

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  1. The Cold War Begins Chapter 36

  2. Post War Economic Anxiety • After war many Americans worried that economy would slip back into depression. • At first these predictions seemed to be coming true • GNP dropped in ‘46 and ’47 • Prices rose by 33% in ’46-47. • Strikes swept key industries. • In retrospect, these were simply rebound effects

  3. Taft-Hartley • Republicans controlled Congress for first time in 14 years. • Passed the Taft-Hartley Act over Truman’s veto. • Labor hated this law. Why? • Unions attempts to grow into new areas and industries were frustrated. • South was resistant to unions. Why? • Workers in rapidly growing service sector were hard to organize. Why?

  4. Early Economic Moves • Sold War factories and other government installations at very low prices. • How does this benefit business? • Employment Act (1946) creates Council of Economic advisors.Purpose? • GI Bill: Servicemen’s Readjustment Act of 1944. • Provisions? • Helps to expand the middle class and absorb returning GIs

  5. The Long Economic Boom, 1950-1970 The Economic Boom between 1950 and 1970 was the longest and biggest in the nations history. It transformed the country. National income doubled in the 1950s and doubled again in the 1960s. Americans 6% of the population but 40% of the wealth. Size of the middle class rose to 60%-double that prior to the depression. Americans became consume-aholics. Owning a car became standard, and two was better. Is like the roaring 20s, but tinged with optimism.

  6. New World for Women • Women reaped huge benefits from the post-war boom. • New employment. • Source of income and independence to women. • Effect of growth of service sector • Culture glorified women as home-makers and mothers. • Women react against gap between stereotype and reality with women’s movement of the 1960s.

  7. Causes of economic expansion • The war itself • Continued military spending • Cheap Energy • Increase in productivity • Education • New Tech • Shift in the nation’s basic economic structure

  8. The Smiling Sunbelt • For 30 years after the war 30 Mil. people changed residences every year. • How does this change society? • Growth of the Sunbelt—South, Southwest and California grow at a rate nearly double that of the old northwest. • Grow of Sunbelt fueled by federal spending.

  9. The Rush To The Suburbs • Starting in the 1950s white middle-class fled the cities to the suburbs. • Reasons: • Federal loan guarantees made it more economically attractive to own a home in the suburbs than to rent in the city. • Tax deductions for mortgage interest, but not rent. • New highways and car-ownership made it easier. • Desire for the peace and prosperity of the new suburbs. • By 1960 one-in-four Americans lived in the suburbs, by 1990 half the population lives in suburbs.

  10. Consequences of Growth of Suburbia • Construction industry booms—Levitt brothers/Levitt Town • Changes the pattern of life • Changes the nature of commerce. • White Flight/impoverishment of inner-cities

  11. The Postwar Baby Boom • Baby Boom is the huge surge in births in the 15 years after WWII. • Why it happened. • 50 Million new babies over 15 years. • Peaks in 1957 • Baby boom has lasting consequences • Created a secondary baby-boom. • One of the prime targets of advertisers; thus impact on popular culture. • Many of those in the rebellious generations in the 60s and 1970s were baby-boomers.

  12. Truman • Shock of having a new president. • Truman much different from FDR. • Compromise VP choice, only a middling Senator. • FDR had left him largely out of the loop • Truman bio and personality

  13. Yalta: Bargain Or Betrayal • February, 1945, Stalin, Churchill and Roosevelt meet in Yalta. • Issues: • How to finish the war • What to do with Germany and Japan • How to handle rebuilding of nations ravaged by the war. • Agree to a multi-power summit in San Francisco to work on a successor to the League of Nations (What becomes the United Nations) • Problems—Atomic Bomb not yet perfected and looks like will be a very bloody invasion of Japan. • US wants Soviet help to pin down Japanese troops in Manchuria and Korea. • Stalin unwilling

  14. Yalta Assessed • Yalta has been criticized: • Sold out Poland and Eastern Europe • Gave the Soviets too much in China. • Russian help not needed in Japan • Soviets would have entered the war anyway • FDR was feeble and therefore was hoodwinked by Stalin. • Response: • Yalta was not a treaty—it was a statement of intents and common purposes. • USSR already had effective control of Eastern Europe and we couldn’t stop them from entering. • Yalta was an attempt to get all three allied powers on the same page as the war reached its conclusion.

  15. Reasons for Clash with Soviets Two preeminent military powers in the world. Each had half of Europe. Each distrusted the other’s system Soviets were skeptical of US and GB Different visions of the post-war world and each other Soviets and Americans had many similarities that contributed to clash

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