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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 6 page paper discussing the general positive effects that the outbreak of war typically brings, followed by a discussion of conditions in Iraq prior to the beginning of Iraqi Freedom. War typically elevates a sagging economy, and such was the case with the short-lived Iraq war. Those positive effects are fleeting, however, as it becomes evident that reconstruction will require untold billions. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: CC6_KSeconWar2.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
US economy in a stranglehold throughout the decade of the 1930s. At its height in the early years of the decade, it loosened its grip several times as the
federal government instituted program after program designed to spur the economy. All of those efforts provided only temporary relief, however, and soon economic conditions would sink again to the
levels that existed before the latest impetus effort. One can almost hear Franklin Roosevelt musing that what we really needed was just one good war...
That war came in the form of World War II, of course. The federal government could get away with helping Britain in the form of providing
materiel, but the people would never stand for entering a war that did not directly affect the United States. The Japanese quite nicely obliged, however. The attack on
Pearl Harbor made the war a personal matter with the people of the country, unleashing both unbridled patriotism as well as the economic benefits that come with war. Lessons from
History Entering World War II meant for the factories of the country that they would need to help supply the needs of the
soldiers being sent literally around the world. Factories that had stood idle or working at greatly reduced capacity suddenly were converted to military use and began churning out tanks
and fatigues. Only a limited number of autos were available for purchase during the early 1940s, but the factories of Detroits automakers were operating at full capacity to supply
the needs of the war. Though the companies were not able to profit from the sale of their peacetime products, they received payment from the US government for the
...