this post was submitted on 21 Feb 2025
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Pretty sure all of Europe needing to be rebuilt, and the US having the only working industrial sector had a huge thing to with it...
Not slashing taxes... taxes were at their highest in the 60s.
There were a ton of policies enacted leading up to and during WW2 that restricted free enterprise, and I'm using "tax rates" as sort of a catch all here. This is an interesting article about it:
How did that sudden shift happen?
And in the conclusion:
Basically, the government stopped directing the economy (i.e. taking taxes and spending as it saw fit) and allowed the market to dictate how money would flow. The result was a (relatively) smooth transition to a peacetime economy, which was capable of taking advantage of ravaged economies elsewhere in the world.
That's irrelevant. What matters is the relative change and the signal that sends to the market. Top tax rates were 94%, and dropped substantially (to around 86%-ish top marginal rate, corporate taxes also cut) after the war. But then we had the Korean war, and taxes increased again. But again, it's the signal that matters here, not the absolute numbers.
There are a ton of other factors. My general thrust is that there was a huge drop in government spending and therefore a lower need for revenue, and that opened up that money to be used for other purposes.
Yeah, I'm not going to bother with a source from a capitalist... Sorry. I'll just go with the facts: The US was pretty much the only ones who could rebuild Europe... Eveyrone else had their entire industries flattened.
It wasn't about cutting taxes. It was about "Unleashing the market"... Those are oligarch talking points, to try and convince us to let them be Robber Barons again.
Europe could also rebuild Europe, it would just take a lot longer. The US spent a ton of money rebuilding both Europe and Japan, and being able to do that while also transitioning back to a peacetime economy really is something IMO. Not to mention getting embroiled in the Korean war just a few short years later, while still rebuilding after the war.
I don't really like Truman, but I think he did a decent job after the war.