I would like to know, really. There is probably an expedient path, but I certainly don't profess to know it. Suggestions anyone? m/r
Three Lessons from the Gilded Age
First, we began to pay off the huge national debt we acquired during the Civil War. In 1860, right before the Civil War, the U.S. had a national debt of $65 million. Five years later, when the war ended, the U.S. national debt was almost $2.7 billion—almost forty times the pre-war debt. According to the Historical Statistics of the United States, the total interest charge on the new national debt was almost $138 million—more than twice the total debt before the war. Many Americans (and Europeans) wondered whether or not the U.S. would be faithful to pay off this new, gigantic debt. Republican and Democratic presidents alike agreed that U.S. economic prosperity depended on carrying a much smaller debt load with limited government. Thus, we slashed almost two-thirds of this debt in the 28 years after the Civil War—a time of cutting federal spending and securing budget surpluses every year to pay down the debt.
Second, the U.S. maintained a sound currency. We refused to pay off debtors by having the government issue vast sums of paper money—as some European countries had done earlier. In fact, we decided to back with gold the $400+ million greenbacks that we had issued during the Civil War. Some Americans wanted to issue more greenbacks—and benefit by paying off debts cheaply through inflation. But Presidents Grant and Hayes insisted that the U.S. buy up gold for the treasury so that we could fulfill our implied promise to the owners of greenbacks to pay them all back with gold. When we officially did this in 1879, we were telling the world that the U.S. was open for business on honorable terms. Many foreigners chose to invest in the U.S., and that capital helped expand railroads, the steel industry, and the oil industry—all areas where the U.S. began outclassing England, Germany, and the leading countries of Europe.
Third, we cut taxes as well as federal spending.
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