In The Cost of Winning, Michael H. Cosgrove describes how the
United States used economic policies to contain the Soviet Union
during the post-World War n era and how those policies turned a
vibrant American economy into one of broken promises and declining
power. Cosgrove defines and examines the five economic building
blocks used to contain the Soviets in America's Golden Age: the
Marshall Plan, free trade, federal income tax policy, the American
defense umbrella, and plentiful and cheap oil from the Middle East.
He explains how policies supporting these building blocks allowed
U.S. taxpayers to both contain the Soviets and enjoy a rapidly
rising standard of living. America's economic superstate began to
crumble, however, with President Nixon's August 1971 decision to
abandon the gold quasi-standard and Saudi Arabia's 1973 decision to
cut oil shipments to America. Lean years for the American economy
set in.
When the American economy could no longer deliver the American
dream, entitlements were increased in an attempt to fill the gap
between expectations and what the private sector could provide.
Since the early 1970s, real purchasing power has been steadily
eroding for approximately 75 million private sector workers. The
American dream that a good education would lead to a decent job and
a rising standard of living in a safe neighborhood has been dashed.
Violent crime in America increases while expenditures on public
safety rapidly increase.
Will America be the first world power to reverse its relative
decline? Cosgrove maintains that Congress must initiate the upward
process by restructuring itself. Rather than meeting in Washington,
D.C., Congress should meet a maximum three to four months per year
at a different site each year to achieve "American revitalization."
Cosgrove's solutions to the problems of crime include law
enforcement through use of bounty hunters to identify and capture
alleged criminals, and to establish a fixed penalty system for
violent crimes to make costs of committing crime clearer to
everyone. Certain to be controversial, this intriguing examination
of the state of affairs in the United States, and the author's
recommended policies will be compelling reading for sociologists,
policymakers, economists, and scholars with an interest in applied
public policy for the long haul.
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