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Economy During The Gilded Age

Decent Essays

“Although the economic growth of the United States in the gilded age has been attributed to individual hard work and a government policy of laissez faire, it was in fact encouraged and sustained by direct government intervention.”

During the Gilded Age, robber barons dominated the scene through industrialism and capitalism at the expense of consumers in the U.S. The United States economy rapidly expanded and experienced astounding growth due to the ambition of many greedy men. The government adopted the policy of laissez faire, an attitude of letting things take their own course, to generate industrial wealth. With the U.S economy growing and its instability just as much, direct government intervention encouraged and sustained the economy by passing reform acts. The Gilded Age, yet filled with corruption, was a marvelous time period for the U.S. economy. In this era, an immense wealth was accumulated by a number of individuals, such as J.P Morgan …show more content…

As a young man, he built factories and steel mills in Pennsylvania that later became a massive company called “The Carnegie Steel Company”. This steel company made him a prosperous man, and as a result, he was able to buy more steel companies. Since Carnegie owned most of the steel mills in the United States; he became a millionaire. Andrew Carnegie owned railroads and shipped his steel to various locations. Particularly, he owned land in Minnesota where the iron for making steel was discovered. During the process of being on top of the steel industry, Andrew was very contradictory. He supported worker rights, but at the same time he destroyed unions, paid his workers very low incomes. Subsequently, Andrew Carnegie’s business was booming and steel orders flooded in. In 1887 the government passed the Interstate Commerce Act due to the monopolistic playing a game with consumer’s money raising the prices as they

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