English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

4 answers

It basically brought the US economy out of the great depression.

2006-11-08 03:32:36 · answer #1 · answered by Robert b 4 · 1 0

America suffered crib death from the Baby Boomers, who really represented only that part of their generation whose fathers made money off the destruction of our economic competition in WWII. Easy money and easy upward mobility were the rewards of those who drank the blood money of those who were sacrificed in the war, in which the fascists lost their worst men and America lost its best. Those who hustled their way into the upper class set up an aristocracy for their spawn, the Baby Boomers, and closed off upward mobility from 1960 on, except for class-climbing wimps who were willing to sacrifice their personal lives and their personalities to brown-nose their way into the spoiled circle of the Baby Boom heirs of the postwar Easy Money. Because the post-postwar economy has been led by no-talent rich kids and their no-talent yes men, the delayed economic impact of WWII has destroyed the economy, perhaps permanently.

2006-11-08 11:42:32 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

the initial economic impact of WW1 on the US was bad.....production levels of weapons and ammunitions fell drastically and many factories closed down...but 3 years later 1921 the USA's economy boomed because the USA had come out of the war as the world superpower as there was a oneway trade with europe and the USA had taken over all of europes trade markets....and as europe bought all its goods from the US as the US produced better than its german and other european competitors.....its economy was doing really well after the initial economic depression after the war

2006-11-08 11:33:31 · answer #3 · answered by sosta 3 · 1 0

The first person said it best. It got the U.S. out of the depression and created tons of jobs for those looking for work.

2006-11-08 12:15:01 · answer #4 · answered by chrstnwrtr 7 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers