Over the last four years America's foreign economic policy jumped its traditional track. The first few postwar administrations practiced a single-handed kind of world leadership, because there was no one else to help. As Europe and Japan gained more economic strength, recent presidents focused on ways to share the management of the world economy. But President Reagan and his team seemed far less interested in international economic policy. Above all, they were preoccupied with events at home.
Jeffrey E. Garten manages the Far Eastern investment banking activities of Lehman Brothers from Tokyo. He was on the staff of the White House Council on International Economic Policy in the Nixon Administration and a member of the State Departments Policy Planning Staff under Presidents Ford and Carter. The author is grateful for research assistance provided by Maria Zammit. Copyright © 1985 by Jeffrey E. Garten.
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