11
The time of economic miracles
The post-war decades were a surprise not only for Marxists
and Keynesians; in their earlier stages they were hailed
as miracles in various countries. In dealing with the pst-war
time I am going to extend the discussion from the subject
of the U.S. to the wider field of industrial countries
i.e. especially Europe. They all to a greater or lesser extent
shared the experience of the pre-war crisis and unemployment
and they were all enjoying a rather exceptional growth of
output, productivity and employment now.
I want to carry out my explanation in two steps: I shall
first explain how the high level of employment and growth
came about initially. Second I shall show that after these
favorable conditions had been established they themselves
created forces capable of perpetuating high growth.
Taking the U.S. first, there was a basic stimulus from
public spending which had greatly expanded as compared to
pre-war. The effect of that was an expansion of effective
dm^and even though there were no deficits. The spending (much
of it military ) was in part financed by taxes on corporate
profits ( see my paper in the Cambridge Journal 1979 ).
The result of the combination of spending and taxes on strong
higher
savers is an expansion of output by^utilisation of capacity
( 90 p.c. in the 50s ) up to the point where the profit and
saving remaining after the higher taxes have been paid
are as great as the y were before. While the profit situation
of the corporations thus was not made worse by the higher