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The long boom refers to two distinct periods of economic growth - the sustained global period of economic growth following the Second World War and the period in the 1990s of Postwar Boom: 1950-1973The term the long boom is used by some historians to describe the period from approximately 1950 to the oil crisis of The economies of Japan, Germany, France, and Italy did particularly well, each of these countries caught up to and exceeded the GDP of the United Kingdom for the first time during these years, even as the UK itself was experiencing the greatest absolute prosperity in its history (the UK Conservatives' re-election slogan in 1959 was "You've never had it so good"). In Most developing countries also did well in this period, especially compared to the 1980s and 1990s, which were plagued by debt and financial crises, with the notable exceptions of Effects of the long boomIt had many social, cultural and political effects (not least of which was the demographic blip we call the baby boomers). Movements and phenomena associated with this period include the height of the Cold War, postmodernism, decolonization, a marked increase in consumerism, the welfare state, the space race, the non-aligned movement, import substitution, opposition to the Vietnam War, the civil rights movement, the sexual revolution and the beginning of feminism, and a nuclear arms race. In the In the West, there emerged a near complete consensus against strong ideology and a belief that technocratic and scientific solutions could be found to most of humanity's problems, a view advanced by U.S. President John F Kennedy in 1962. This optimism was symbolized through such events as the 1964 1990s US boomThe term is also used of the 1990s when the The book, written by Peter Schwarz, Peter Leyden, and Joel Hyatt and published in 1999, is in turn based on a Wired Magazine cover story from 1997, by the same authors. Both the article and the book declared optimistically that the late-90s technology-fueled economic boom would continue for another two decades, sending the NASDAQ index to ten thousand points, while technology would eliminate environmental and social problems. In retrospect, after the stock markets' near-crash during 2000-2002, led by tech stocks, with few signs of recovery, the long boom theory is by many seen as overly utopian, driven by the same baseless optimism that inflated the late-nineties Internet bubble. Copyright 2008 - France BtoB from Wikipédia
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