American Decades
Credit, Inflation, and Price Controls
"Buying on Time."
During the 1950s "buying on time"—paying for a large purchase in monthly installments—became acceptable as a regular practice, not just in time of need. Americans used credit to purchase new cars, electronic equipment, household goods, and appliances at a record pace. (Of course, age generally determined whether you were a borrower or a saver: people forty years old or older saved far more and borrowed less than younger people.) During the 1920s, the last time consumers had any real purchasing power, banks were reluctant to grant personal loans for consumer spending. But the late 1940s saw a sharp increase in the number of new families, many of whom were furnishing their new households. Banks recognized a large pool of potential loan customers and encouraged consumers to finance their auto purchases. By 1956 nearly 20 percent of the nation's commercial bank loans were to individual consumers. Banks profited by...
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1950's Business and the Economy
- Overview
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Topics in the News
- Advertising in the 1950s
- The AFL-CIO
- Air Travel in the 1950s
- Alcoa, Aluminum, and the End of a Monopoly
- Bank of America Leads a Financial Expansion
- Big vs. Small Businesses
- Creating the Computer
- Credit, Inflation, and Price Controls
- Energy
- Farming in the 1950s
- Housing in the 1950s
- Labor in the 1950s
- The Merger Wave
- The Military-Industrial Complex
- The National Highway Act and the Auto Industry
- The Railroad and its Decline
- Shopping Malls
- The Stock Market and Investment Trends
- The Sun Belt
- The Television Industry
- The Turbulent Teamsters
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Business and the Economy, 1950–1959
