Unregulated speculation in the U.S. stock market created a great crash in the financial markets that affected every corner of the globe. Global economic cooperation was essential to prevent such a worldwide catastrophe again, and without government involvement, such economic and political instability would reoccur, with devastating consequences.
In the 1970s, however, dissatisfaction with the social welfare state began to surface. Distrust with the federal government in the wake of the Vietnam War began to rise. Nixon's attempts to instate wage and price controls and failed. Powerful trade unions in Britain brought the nation to a standstill, spurring on the rise of Thatcherism. America applauded Ronald Regan's union-busting policies regarding the air traffic controllers in America. World economic events had demonstrated that higher inflation did not necessarily assure lower unemployment, just like the Chicago School economists had said, rather high government deficits to correct high unemployment only created a more unstable economy. The devastating hyperinflation affecting Latin American nations, such as Argentina, were the result of a capitalist yet highly regulated and protectionist regimes. These called into question the applicability of Keynes' government-based solutions to the current economic instability.
Describe whose ideas were shaped into the economic remedy known as "Shock Therapy" and what were the main countries it influenced?
Towards the end of the 20th century, with the fall of communism, the question arose as to how to undo the damage caused by a purely command economy. How to create competitive market structures in a land once dominated by a single, state-run regime that planned every facet of people's economic life? The former republics of the Soviet Union and members of the Warsaw Pact were faced with this dilemma. The answer proposed by the International Monetary...
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