American Decades
"Consumer Credit: High But Safe"
Magazine article
By: Newsweek
Date: March 14, 1955
Source: "Consumer Credit: High But Safe." Newsweek, March 14, 1955, 75.
About the Publication: Thomas J. C. Martyn published the first issue of Newsweek in February 1933. In 1961, it was bought by the Washington Post Company. It's circulation is 3.1 million in the United States and over 900,000 internationally.
Introduction
Economists have long pondered the question of scarcity—will human beings ever have enough resources to fulfill basic needs? For most of U.S. history, scarcity economics dominated the thinking of scholars and the day-to-day lives of most Americans. In the 1920s, business leaders began talking about a "New Era" of economic activity based on mass production, mass consumption, and high wages. By the end of that decade, this hint of modern consumer culture was swept away by...
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1950's Business and the Economy Primary Sources
- "Battle Over Television: Hollywood Faces the Fifties: Part II"
- Inflation
- "Television's Big Boom: Still to Come"
- "Over the Top"
- "What the Public Thinks About Big Business"
- "How to Make a Billion: Fables of Texas Oil"
- "Consumer Credit: High But Safe"
- "The South Bets on Industry"
- "Convention Expels Teamsters"
- "Why the Edsel Laid an Egg: Research vs. the Reality Principle"
- "The 'Invisible' Unemployed"
- "It's a Smaller World"
- "The Challenge of Inflation"
- "Success by Imitation"
- Copyright Page
- Acknowledgments
