The juxtaposition of Kennedy and Reagan approaches to economic problems is particularly instructive in that they express the two major - and quite different - approaches of macroeconomic policy in the past three decades: the 1962 Kennedy Camelot which relied on traditional Keynesian economics, and the 1982 Reagan program which called for a supplyside solution to the country's economic difficulties. From today's vantage point it is useful to compare what these two different groups of economic advisors planned to do, what they did, and what the results were.
The juxtaposition of these two approaches to economic problems is particularly instructive in that they express the two major--and quite different--approaches of macroeconomic policy in the past three decades: the 1962 Keynesian economics, and the 1982 Reagan program, which called for a supply-side solution to the country's economic difficulties. From today's vantage point it is useful to compare what these two different groups of economic advisers planned to do, what they did, and what the results were.