America In The World Economy: A Strategy For The 1990s; Day Of Reckoning: The Consequences Of American Economic Policy Under Reagan And After
"The current prosperity," says Bergsten, "has a precarious foundation." The accompanying "sense of economic well-being," according to Friedman, is "an illusion based on borrowed time and borrowed money." Friedman goes into detail in a hard-hitting, eloquent condemnation of the government's fiscal misdeeds. Bergsten puts his emphasis on a set of policies calculated to get us back into international balance with the least pain-if all goes well. Each book strikingly demonstrates the inextricable connections needed between the internal and external measures. Without agreeing in all particulars, these very good books support and complement each other. Together with After Reagan by C. Michael Aho and Marc Levinson (reviewed in Foreign Affairs, Winter 1988/89) they provide not just starting places for the new administration but also analyses against which to test policy for some time to come.
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The 1930s deserve their bad reputation. Unemployment, misery, for many people hunger and, for more, the lack of hope, went with all the other ills of the Great Depression. Then Hitler came to power and fascism around the world grew stronger. The invasions of China by Japan and Ethiopia by Italy, and the Franco rebellion in Spain that soon came to be seen as a kind of global civil war--all showed the way the world was going. Driven by economic pressures, the policies of democratic countries became more narrowly nationalistic; bilateral and preferential trade agreements increased and France, Britain and Holland did what they could to assert privileged positions in their colonies. Although the Soviet Union was hardly a worker's paradise, the very fact that it offered an alternative to collapsed capitalism stirred people's interest and the Kremlin had new cards to play with. The worried democracies, meanwhile, did little to check the rising strength of fascism and were led to make one concession after another. If the times had any redeeming feature, it was that they made people think.
A look back at perhaps the most important foreign policy success of the postwar period. Edited by Peter Grose, with contributions by historians Diane B. Kunz and David Reynolds, a memoir by Charles P. Kindleberger, a profile of Marshall and Acheson by James Chace and one of Will Clayton by Gregory Fossedal and Bill Mikhail. And reflections from Roy Jenkins, Walt Rostow, and Helmut Schmidt.
A look back at perhaps the most important foreign policy success of the postwar period. Edited by Peter Grose, with contributions by historians Diane B. Kunz and David Reynolds, a memoir by Charles P. Kindleberger, a profile of Marshall and Acheson by James Chace and one of Will Clayton by Gregory Fossedal and Bill Mikhail. And reflections from Roy Jenkins, Walt Rostow, and Helmut Schmidt.

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