Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. People also ask

  2. The 1990s are remembered as a time of strong economic growth, steady job creation, low inflation, rising productivity, economic boom, and a surging stock market that resulted from a combination of rapid technological changes and sound central monetary policy . The prosperity of the 1990s was not evenly distributed over the entire decade.

  3. The economy turned in an increasingly healthy performance as the 1990s progressed. With the fall of the Soviet Union and Eastern European communism in the late 1980s, trade opportunities expanded greatly. Technological developments brought a wide range of sophisticated new electronic products.

  4. Oct 18, 2010 · From 1990-1995, real gross domestic product (GDP) grew at an average annual rate of just 2.4% per year (down from 4.3% real annual growth from 1983-1989), and multi-factor productivity gains – the most comprehensive measure of productivity – limped along at an average of 0.5% per year.

  5. Nov 2, 2001 · Perhaps the simplest overall conclusion one can draw from the 1990s is that the U.S. economy runs relatively well given a little luck and the avoidance of major macroeconomic policy mistakes....

  6. Dec 25, 2012 · Unemployment averaged just 5.7 percent in the '90s. The stock market returned 18 percent a year for the decade. Inflation was tame. And the federal government actually ran surpluses for a few...

  7. Apr 10, 2002 · The story of the 1990s Sluggish economic, employment and wage growth marked the period from 1991 to 1995. In comparison, accelerated employment, productivity and wage growth, as well as faster investment and consumption growth were characteristic in the later 1990s through to the end of 2000.

  8. Oct 1, 2002 · At the height of the 1990s economic boom—a period of unprecedented growth—capitalism American-style seemed triumphant. After sluggishness in the 1970s and 1980s, productivity in the United States...

  1. People also search for