Early 1980s recession

The early 1980s recession describes the severe global economic recession affecting much of the developed world in the late 1970s and early 1980s. The United States and Japan exited the recession relatively early, but high unemployment would continue to affect other OECD nations through to at least 1985.[1] Long-term effects of the recession contributed to the Latin American debt crisis, the savings and loans crisis in the United States, and a general adoption of neoliberal economic policies throughout the 1980s and 1990s.

Canada

In the early 1980s, Canada experienced higher inflation, interest rates, and underemployment than the United States did.[2] The Bank of Canada rate hit 21% in August 1981, and the inflation rate averaged more than 12%.[3] The inflationary period made Canadians seek to protect themselves through investment in the housing market.

Some saw an advantage to high interest rates by speculation in real estate and other assets. The increase in transactions was financed through borrowing and ultimately caused debt levels to rise.[4]

Canadian firms, preoccupied with prospective investment opportunities because of high inflation, no longer focused on innovation and productivity improvements. In addition, high inflation was partly responsible for larger government spending. The overall tax burden rose from 27% of income in 1951, to 34% in 1969, to 37% in 1988.[5] From 1975 to 1992 national debt more than tripled to 8% of GDP.[6] The resulting high interest rates caused more Canadian income to be paid out to foreign holders of Canadian public and private sector debt.

Canada changed from a country producing and exporting mainly primary products to one producing and exporting more manufactured goods.[2] Jobs were lost to mechanization in industry. Moreover, globalization meant that Canadian firms had to downsize their workforce in order to stay efficient and compete internationally.[7] In early 1980s, Canada’s unemployment rate peaked at 12%.[3] It took almost four years for the number of full-time jobs to be restored.[7] A slowdown in productivity also emerged during the recession. Real GDP declined by 5%[3] between June 1981 and December 1982 and average output per worker slowed to 1%.[3] The U.S. decision to switch to a floating exchange rate devalued the Canadian dollar. By 1979, the Canadian dollar was worth 85 cents U.S., which made U.S. imports more expensive. On the other hand, Canada’s major exports declined in price. Combined with high inflation, and interest rates, these high commodity prices reduced the standard of living.[7]

United Kingdom

Economic impact

As with most of the rest of the developed world, recession also hit the United Kingdom at the turn of the 1980s, but the economy had been plagued by a string of crises for most of the 1970s, and unemployment had gradually increased since the mid-1960s.

When the Conservative Party led by Margaret Thatcher won the general election of May 1979 and swept James Callaghan's Labour Party from power, the country had just witnessed the Winter of Discontent in which numerous public sector workers had staged strikes. Inflation was about 10% and some 1.5 million people were unemployed; compared to some 1 million in 1974, 580,000 in 1970 and just over 300,000 in 1964.[8] Thatcher set about to control inflation with monetarist policies and change trade union laws in an attempt to reduce the strikes of public-sector workers who disagreed with her privatisation policies and cuts to reduce inflation.[9]

Thatcher's battle against inflation resulted in the closure of many inefficient factories, shipyards and coalpits, mostly during her first four-year term in power. That helped bring inflation below 10% by the turn of 1982 (having peaked at 22% in 1980) and by spring 1983, it had fallen to a 15-year low of 4%. Strikes were also at their lowest level since the early 1950s, and wage growth rose to 3.8% by 1983.[10]

However, it also resulted in unemployment reaching 3 million by January 1982, a level not seen for some 50 years. That accounted for about 12.5% of the workforce. Northern Ireland was the hardest-hit region, with unemployment standing at nearly 20% and exceeding 15% in much of Scotland and northern England; it was below 10% in only in Southeastern England.[11]

Even the 2 million figure, first seen around the end of 1980, had not been reached in over 40 years.

By April 1983, Britain, once known globally as the "workshop of the world" from its strong manufacturing base, became a net importer of goods for the first time ever, largely due to the loss of heavy industry under Thatcher. Areas of Tyneside, Yorkshire, Merseyside, South Wales, the West of Scotland and the West Midlands were particularly hard hit by the loss of industry and subsequent sharp rise in unemployment. The national average unemployment, by January 1982, was around 12.5%, but in some of the regions, it was approaching 20% and would remain similarly high for a number of years afterwards.

Despite the economic recovery that followed the early 1980s recession, unemployment in the United Kingdom barely fell until the second half of the decade because of, it can be argued, Thatcher's economic policies. Unemployment still exceeded 3 million as late as 1986,[12] but it fell below that figure the following year[13] and by the end of 1989 it had fallen to 1.6 million.[14]

Political impact

The mass unemployment and social discontent resulting from the recession were widely seen as major factors in widespread rioting across Britain during 1981 in parts of towns and cities including Toxteth in Liverpool and a number of districts of London.[15] Four years later, in 1985, when the economy had been out of recession for three years but unemployment remained high, there was another wave of rioting across Britain, again with several parts of London being affected, among others. High unemployment, caused by Thatcher's focus on inflation, and social discontent were once again seen as factors in the rioting.[16]

In the first three years of Thatcher's premiership, opinion polls gave the Tory government approval ratings as low as 25%, with the polls initially being led by the Labour opposition and then by the SDP-Liberal Alliance which was formed by the Liberal Party and the Labour breakaway Social Democratic Party in 1981. However, an economic recovery, combined with the Falklands War, led to the Thatcher led Conservative party winning 42.4% of votes for a parliamentary majority in the general election in 1983.

United States

U.S. GDP growth in the early 1980s. The short recession at the start of the decade and the following brief period of growth as well as the deeper recession in 1981 and 1982 have led to the period being characterized as a W-shaped recession.
  Percent Change From Preceding Period in Real Gross Domestic Product (annualized; seasonally adjusted);   Average GDP growth 1947–2009
Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis

The early 1980s recession in the United States began in July 1981 and ended in November 1982.[17][18][19] One cause was the Federal Reserve's contractionary monetary policy, which sought to rein in the high inflation.[20] In the wake of the 1973 oil crisis and the 1979 energy crisis, stagflation began to afflict the economy.

Unemployment

Unemployment had risen from 5.1% in January 1974 to a high of 9.0% in May 1975. Although it had gradually declined to 5.6% by May 1979, unemployment began rising again. It jumped sharply to 6.9% in April 1980 and to 7.5% in May 1980. A mild recession from January to July 1980 kept unemployment high, but despite economic recovery, unemployment remained at historically high levels (about 7.5%) until the end of 1981.[21] In mid-1982, Rockford, Illinois, had the highest unemployment of all metro areas with 25%.[22] In September 1982, Michigan led the nation with 14.5%; Alabama was second with 14.3%; and West Virginia was third with 14.0%. The Youngstown–Warren Metropolitan Area had an 18.7% rate, the highest of all metro areas while Stamford, Connecticut, had the lowest with 3.5% unemployment.[23]

The peak of the recession occurred in November and December 1982, when the nationwide unemployment rate was 10.8%, the highest since the Great Depression. As of 2015, it is still the highest since the 1930s.[24] In November, West Virginia and Michigan had the highest unemployment with 16.4%; Alabama was in third with 15.3%; South Dakota had the lowest unemployment rate in the nation, with 5.6%. Flint, Michigan, had the highest unemployment rate of all metro areas, with 23.4%.[25] In March 1983, West Virginia's unemployment rate hit 20.1%. In spring 1983, thirty states had double-digit unemployment. When Reagan was re-elected in 1984, the latest unemployment numbers (August 1984) showed West Virginia still had the highest rate in the nation, 13.6%, followed by Mississippi, at 11.1%, and Alabama, at 10.9%.[26]

Inflation

Inflation, which had averaged 3.2% annually in the post-war period, had more than doubled after the 1973 oil shock to a 7.7% annual rate. Inflation reached 9.1% in 1975, the highest rate since 1947. Inflation declined to 5.8% the following year but then edged higher. By 1979, inflation reached a startling 11.3% and in 1980 soared to 13.5%.[17][27]

A brief recession occurred in 1980. Several key industries including housing, steel manufacturing and automobiles experienced a downturn from which they did not recover until the end of the next recession. Many of the economic sectors that supplied the basic industries were also hit hard.[28]

Each period of high unemployment was caused by the Federal Reserve, as it substantially increased interest rates to reduce high inflation. Each time, once inflation fell and interest rates were lowered, unemployment slowly fell.[29]

Determined to wring inflation out of the economy, Federal Reserve chairman Paul Volcker slowed the rate of growth of the money supply and raised interest rates. The federal funds rate, which was about 11% in 1979, rose to 20% by June 1981. The prime interest rate, a highly important economic measure, eventually reached 21.5% in June 1982.[19][30]

Financial industry crisis

The recession had a severe effect on financial institutions such as savings and loans and banks.

Banks

The recession came at a particularly bad time for banks because of a recent wave of deregulation. The Depository Institutions Deregulation and Monetary Control Act of 1980 had phased out a number of restrictions on banks' financial practices, broadened their lending powers, and raised the deposit insurance limit from $40,000 to $100,000, raising the problem of moral hazard.[31] Banks rushed into real estate lending, speculative lending, and other ventures as the economy soured.

By mid-1982, the number of bank failures was rising steadily. Bank failures reached a post-depression high of 42 as the recession, and high interest rates took their toll.[32] By the end of the year, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) had spent $870 million to purchase bad loans in an effort to keep various banks afloat.[33]

In July 1982, Congress enacted the Garn–St. Germain Depository Institutions Act of 1982 (Garn–St. Germain), which further deregulated banks as well as deregulating savings and loans. The Act authorized banks to begin offering money market accounts, in an attempt to encourage deposit in-flows and removed additional statutory restrictions in real estate lending and relaxed loans-to-one-borrower limits. That encouraged a rapid expansion in real estate lending at a time when the real estate market was collapsing and increased the unhealthy competition between banks and savings and loans and encouraged too many branches to be started.[31]

The recession affected the banking industry long after the economic downturn had technically ended, in November 1982. In 1983, another 50 banks failed. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation listed another 540 banks as "problem banks," on the verge of failure.[33]

In 1984, the Continental Illinois National Bank and Trust Company, the nation's seventh-largest bank (with $45 billion in assets), failed. The FDIC had long known of its problems. The bank had first approached failure in July 1982 when the Penn Square Bank, which had partnered with Continental Illinois in a number of high-risk lending ventures, collapsed. However, federal regulators were reassured by Continental Illinois executives that steps were being taken to ensure the bank's financial security. After its collapse, federal regulators were willing to let the bank fail to reduce moral hazard and so encourage other banks to rein in some of their more risky lending practices. Members of Congress and the press, however, felt Continental Illinois was "too big to fail". In May 1984, federal banking regulators finally offered a $4.5 billion rescue package to Continental Illinois.[31]

Continental Illinois may not have been too big to fail, but its collapse could have caused the failure of some of the largest banks. The American banking system had been significantly weakened by the severe recession and the effects of deregulation. Had other banks been forced to write off loans to Continental Illinois, institutions such as Manufacturer's Hanover Trust Company, Bank of America, and perhaps Citicorp would have become insolvent.[34]

Saving and Loan crisis

The recession also significantly exacerbated a crisis in the savings and loan industry.

In 1980, there were approximately 4590 state- and federally chartered savings and loan institutions (S&Ls), with total assets of $616 billion. Beginning in 1979, they began losing money due to spiraling interest rates. Net S&L income, which totaled $781 million in 1980, fell to a loss of $4.6 billion in 1981 and a loss of $4.1 billion in 1982. The tangible net worth for the entire S&L industry was virtually zero.[31]

The Federal Home Loan Bank Board (FHLBB) regulated and inspected S&Ls and administered the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation (FSLIC), which insured deposits at S&Ls. The FHLBB's enforcement practices were significantly weaker than those of other federal banking agencies. Until the 1980s, savings and loans had limited lending powers and so the FHLBB was a relatively small agency, overseeing a quiet, stable industry. Unsurprisingly, the FHLBB's procedures and staff were inadequate to supervise S&Ls after deregulation. Also, the FHLBB was unable to add to its staff because of stringent limits on the number of personnel it could hire and the level of compensation it could offer. The limitations were placed on the agency by the Office of Management and Budget and were routinely subject to the political whims of that agency and political appointees in the Executive Office of the President. In financial circles, the FHLBB and FSLIC were called "the doormats of financial regulation."[35]

Because of its weak enforcement powers, the FHLBB and FSLIC rarely forced S&Ls to correct poor financial practices. The FHLBB relied heavily on its persuasive powers and the states to enforce banking regulations. With only five enforcement lawyers, the FHLBB would have been in a poor position to enforce the law even if it had wanted to.[31]

One consequence of the FHLBB's lack of enforcement abilities was the promotion of deregulation and aggressive, expanded lending to forestall insolvency. In November 1980, the FHLBB lowered net worth requirements for federally insured S&Ls from 5% of deposits to 4%. The FHLBB lowered net worth requirements again to 3% in January 1982. Additionally, the agency only required S&Ls to meet these requirements over a 20-year period. The rule meant that S&Ls less than 20 years old had practically no capital reserve requirements. That encouraged extensive chartering of new S&Ls because a $2 million investment could be leveraged into $1.3 billion in lending.[31][35]

Congressional deregulation exacerbated the S&L crisis. The Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981 led to a boom in commercial real estate. The passage of DIDMCA and the Garn–St. Germain Act expanded the authority of federally chartered S&Ls to make acquisition, development, and construction real estate loans, and the statutory limit on loan-to-value ratios was eliminated. The changes allowed S&Ls to make high-risk loans to developers. Beginning in 1982, many S&Ls rapidly shifted away from traditional home mortgage financing and into new, high-risk investment activities such as casinos, fast-food franchises, ski resorts, junk bonds, arbitrage schemes, and derivative instruments.[31]

Federal deregulation also encouraged state legislatures to deregulate state-chartered S&Ls. Unfortunately, many of the states that deregulated S&Ls were also soft on supervision and enforcement. In some cases, state-chartered S&Ls had close political ties to elected officials and state regulators, which further weakened oversight.[31][36][37][38]

As the risk exposure of S&Ls expanded, the economy slid into the recession. Soon, hundreds of S&Ls were insolvent. Between 1980 and 1983, 118 S&Ls with $43 billion in assets failed. The Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation, the federal agency which insured the deposits of S&Ls, spent $3.5 billion to make depositors whole again (in comparison, only 143 S&Ls with $4.5 billion in assets had failed in the previous 45 years, costing the FSLIC $306 million).[31] The FSLIC pushed mergers as a way to avoid insolvency. From 1980 to 1982, there were 493 voluntary mergers and 259 forced mergers of savings and loans overseen by the agency. Despite the failures and mergers, there were still 415 S&Ls at the end of 1982 that were insolvent.[35][37][38][39]

Federal action initially caused the problem by allowing institutions to get involved in creating wealth by unhealthy fractional reserve practices, lending out much more money than they could ever afford to pay back out to customers if they came to withdraw their money. That ultimately led to S&Ls' failure. Later, the governments inaction worsened the industry's problems.

Responsibility for handling the S&L crisis lay with the Cabinet Council on Economic Affairs (CCEA), an intergovernmental council located within the Executive Office of the President. At the time, the CCEA was chaired by Treasury Secretary Donald Regan. The CCEA pushed the FHLBB to refrain from re-regulating the S&L industry and adamantly opposed any governmental expenditures to resolve the S&L problem. Furthermore, the Reagan administration did not want to alarm the public by closing a large number of S&Ls. Such actions significantly worsened the S&L crisis.[31]

The S&L crisis lasted well beyond the end of the economic downturn. The crisis was finally quelled by passage of the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery and Enforcement Act of 1989. The estimated total cost of resolving the S&L crisis was more than $160 billion.[40]

Political fallout

The recession was nearly a year old before President Ronald Reagan stated on October 18, 1981 that the economy was in a "slight recession."[41]

The recession, which has been termed the "Reagan recession,"[42][43][44] coupled with budget cuts, which were enacted in 1981 but began to take effect only in 1982, led many voters to believe that Reagan was insensitive to the needs of average citizens.[45][46][47] In January 1983, Reagan's popularity rating fell to 35%, approaching levels experienced by Richard Nixon and Jimmy Carter at their most unpopular periods.[48][49][50] Although his approval rating did not fall as low as Nixon's during the Watergate scandal, Reagan's re-election seemed unlikely.[51][52][53][54][55]

Pressured to counteract the increased deficit caused by the recession, Reagan agreed to a corporate tax increase in 1982. However, he refused to raise income taxes or cut defense spending. The Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act of 1982 instituted a three-year, $100 billion tax hike, he largest tax increase since the Second World War.[56]

The 1982 mid-term Congressional elections were largely viewed as a referendum on Reagan and his economic policies. The election results proved to be a setback for Reagan and the Republicans. The Democrats gained 26 House seats, which then was the most for the party in any election since the "Watergate year" of 1974.[57][58][59][60][61][62] However, the net balance of power in the Senate was unchanged.

Recovery

United Kingdom

In the UK, economic growth was re-established by the end of 1982, but the era of mass unemployment was far from over. By the summer of 1984, unemployment had hit a new record of 3.3 million (the Great Depression had seen a higher percentage of the workforce unemployed). It remained above the 3 million mark until the spring of 1987, when the Lawson Boom, so named as it was seen as the consequence of tax cuts by Chancellor Nigel Lawson, sparked an economic boom that saw unemployment fall dramatically. By early 1988, it was below 2.5 million; by early 1989, it fell below 2 million. By the end of 1989, it was just over 1.6 million, almost half the figure of three years earlier.[63] However, the unemployment figures did not include benefit claimants who were placed on Employment Training schemes, an adult variant of the controversial Youth Training Scheme, who were paid the same rate of benefit for working full-time hours. Other incentives that aided the British economic recovery after the early 1980s recession included the introduction of Enterprise Zones, on deindustrialised land in which traditional industries were replaced by new industries as well as commercial developments. Businesses were given temporary tax breaks and exemptions as incentives to set up base in such areas.[64]

United States

The midterm elections in the US was the low point of Reagan's presidency.

According to Keynesian economists, a combination of deficit spending and the lowering of interest rates would slowly lead to economic recovery.[65] However, conservatives insist that the significantly lower tax rates caused the recovery. From a high of 10.8% in December 1982, unemployment gradually improved until it fell to 7.2% on Election Day in 1984.[21] Nearly two million people left the unemployment rolls.[66] Inflation fell from 10.3% in 1981 to 3.2% in 1983.[17][67] Corporate earnings rose by 29% in the July-September quarter of 1983, compared with the same period in 1982. Some of the most dramatic improvements came in industries hardest hit by the recession, such as paper and forest products, rubber, airlines, and the auto industry.[66]

By November 1984, voter anger at the recession evaporated and Reagan's re-election was certain.[54][55][62] Reagan was subsequently re-elected by a landslide electoral and popular vote margin in the 1984 presidential election. Immediately after the election, Dave Stockman, Reagan's OMB manager admitted that the coming deficits were much higher than the projections that had been released during the campaign.

See also

Notes

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  3. 1 2 3 4 Horstmann, Ig (May 1, 2009). "The Worst Economic Times Since the Great Depression? A Reality Check". Rotman Institute for International Business Blog.
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  5. "Economics". Canadian Encyclopedia.
  6. Thiessen, Gordon (June 2, 1999). "Canada's Economic Performance at the End of the Twentieth Century". Bank of Canada.
  7. 1 2 3 "New Economic Realities". CBC.
  8. "Unemployment". Politics.co.uk. August 27, 2004.
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  10. 6:30AM BST 30 Mar 2011 (2011-03-30). "How UK incomes have risen (and fallen) since 1948". Telegraph. Retrieved 2016-10-06.
  11. "1982: UK unemployment tops three million". BBC News. January 26, 1982.
  12. Seager, Ashley (August 16, 2006). "20 Years Ago The Dole Queue Hit 3 Million - Today It Is The Workforce That's A Record". The Guardian. London.
  13. "1987: Thatcher's third victory". BBC News. April 5, 2005.
  14. "Economics Essays: Unemployment in the UK 2012". Econ.economicshelp.org. 2012-10-16. Retrieved 2016-10-06.
  15. "Thatcher 'considered arming police' during 1981 riots". BBC News. December 30, 2011.
  16. "Was Tottenham's riot a cry of rage?". BBC News. August 7, 2011.
  17. 1 2 3 Paul Krugman, "Did the Federal Reserve Cause the Recession?", New York Times, April 1, 1991;
  18. National Bureau of Economic Research, "US Business Cycle Expansions and Contractions", Cambridge, Mass., no date.
  19. 1 2 Rattner, Steven (5 January 1981). "Federal Reserve Sees Little Growth in '81 With Continued High Rates". New York Times.
  20. Congressional Budget Office, "The Prospects for Economic Recovery", February 1982. "The downturn was precipitated by a rise in interest rates to levels that exceeded the record rates recorded a year earlier" (p. xi).
  21. 1 2 Table 34, U.S. Federal Reserve Board, Monetary Policy Report to the Congress, February 14, 2007.
  22. Ptashkin, Samantha, "Rockford Unemployment: better off now or in the 1980s?"
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  29. "Federal Funds Rate, Inflation, Unemployment: 1970–1990", Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
  30. Cowan, Edward (5 May 1981). "Bank Lending Rate Set at Record 14% By Federal Reserve". New York Times.
  31. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, History of the Eighties: Lessons for the Future, Vol. 1. Division of Research and Statistics, December 1997.
  32. James L. Rowe, Jr., "Regulators See Bank Failures Rising Steadily", Washington Post, 20 October 1982.
  33. 1 2 Taylor, Alexander L. (29 August 1983). "Why So Many Banks Go Belly Up". Time.
  34. Robert A. Eisenbeis; Paul M. Horvitz (1994). "The Role of Forbearance and Its Costs in Handling Troubled and Failed Depository Institutions". In Kaufman, George G. Reforming Financial Institutions and Markets in the United States. New York: Springer-Verlag. pp. 49–68. ISBN 978-94-010-4616-9.
  35. 1 2 3 Adams, James Ring (1990). The Big Fix: Inside the S&L Scandal. John Wiley & Sons. p. 40. ISBN 978-0471515357.
  36. White, Lawrence J. (1992). The S&L Debacle: Public Policy Lessons for Bank and Thrift Regulation. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0195074840.
  37. 1 2 Norman Strunk and Fred Case, Where Deregulation Went Wrong: A Look at the Causes behind Savings and Loan Failures in the 1980s. Washington, D.C.: Savings & Community Bankers of America, 1988. ISBN 0-929097-32-7.
  38. 1 2 National Commission on Financial Institution Reform, Recovery and Enforcement, "Origin and Causes of the S&L Debacle: A Blueprint for Reform: A Report to the President and Congress of the United States", Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1993.
  39. Lowy, Martin E. (1990). High Rollers: Inside the Savings and Loan Debacle. Praeger. ISBN 978-0275939885.
  40. U.S. General Accounting Office, Financial Audit: Resolution Trust Corporation's 1995 and 1994 Financial Statements. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1996.
  41. Fuerbringer, Jonathan (20 October 1981). "Reagan's 'Slight Recession'". New York Times.
  42. Meyer, David S. (1990). A Winter of Discontent: The Nuclear Freeze and American Politics. Praeger. p. 59. ISBN 978-0275933050.
  43. Gilens, Martin (1999). Why Americans Hate Welfare: Race, Media, and the Politics of Antipoverty Policy. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press. p. 125. ISBN 978-0226293646.
  44. Turgeon, Lynn (1996). Bastard Keynesianism: The Evolution of Economic Thinking and Policy-Making Since World War II. Praeger. p. 135. ISBN 978-0313300240.
  45. Troy, Gil (2005). Morning in America: How Ronald Reagan Invented the 1980s. Princeton University Press. p. 40. ISBN 978-0691096452.
  46. Gilens, 2000, p. 125ff.
  47. Heider, Don (2004). Class and News. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield. p. 50ff. ISBN 9780742527133.
  48. ""Presidential Popularity Over Time"". Presidency.ucsb.edu. Retrieved 2016-10-06.
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  50. "Presidential Popularity Over Time". Presidency.ucsb.edu. Retrieved 2016-10-06.
  51. Pfiffner, James P., ed. (1986). "The Reagan Budget Juggernaut: The Fiscal 1982 Budget Campaign". The President and Economic Policy. Philadelphia, PA: Institute for the Study of Human Issues Press. pp. 108–134. ISBN 978-0897270632.
  52. Weisman, Steven R. (January 21, 1983). "Reagan Term at Midpoint". New York Times.
  53. McGrory, Mary (29 December 1983). "Reagan Clings to Cloud Hanging Over His Reelection Chances". Washington Post.
  54. 1 2 Lipset, Seymour Martin; William Schneider (Spring 1987). "The Confidence Gap during the Reagan Years, 1981–1987" (PDF). Political Science Quarterly. 102 (1).
  55. 1 2 King, Elliott; Michael Schudson (September 1988). "Reagan's Mythical Popularity". Psychology Today.
  56. Smith, Hedrick (January 10, 1982). "The Struggle to Win Control of Congress in November". New York Times.
  57. Herbers, John (1 September 1982). "G.O.P. Coalition of '80 Threatens to Unravel in Congress Elections". New York Times.
  58. Clymer, Adam (3 October 1982). "Democrats Shaping Election as Referendum on Economy". New York Times.
  59. Jacobson, Gary C.; Samuel Kernell (Summer 1982). "Strategy and Choice in the 1982 Congressional Elections" (PDF). PS. 15 (3).
  60. Johannes, John R.; John C. McAdams (November 1984). "The Voter in the 1982 House Elections". American Journal of Political Science. 28.
  61. 1 2 Paul R. Abramson, John H. Aldrich and David W. Rhode, Change and Continuity in the 1984 Elections. Rev. ed. Washington, D.C.: Congressional Quarterly Press, 1987. ISBN 0-87187-417-2.
  62. "Lawson Boom of Late 1980s", Economics Help, January 2008.
  63. Judis, John B. (2009-11-25). "The Case for Deficit Spending | New Republic". Tnr.com. Retrieved 2016-10-06.
  64. 1 2 Alexander, Charles P. (November 28, 1983). "A Lusty, Lopsided Recovery". Time.
  65. Friedman, Thomas L. (September 17, 1981). "Fed's Policy of Tight Money". New York Times.

References

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