Herman van der Wee argues that the dramatic growth in the consumer market that grew exponentially in the latter half of the 20th century has its origins in the changing socio-economic objectives of US, Western European countries and Japan in the afternmath of World War II when economic prosperity became central to government coordination. He argues that these governments constructed the modern consumer economy by powerfully facilitating a growth in demand.<ref name="HVW">{{cite web|author=Herman van der Wee|title=Prosperity and upheaval: the world economy, 1945-1980|publisher=University of California Press|year=1986|page=243|isbn=0520058194}}</ref> This was directly achieved with increasing wages and giving employees a surplus beyond the basic costs of living which gave people a growing capacity to indulge in leisure, tourism, fashion and personal transport.<ref name="HVW"/> As a result, the demand for consumer goods grew, and investment in the private sector thus increased, generating new jobs to meet the growing consumer demand. This in turn had the knock-on effect of increasing the size of the consumer market by employing new people who in turn would have enough money to spend on goods and the economy would continue to grow at an exponential rate.<ref name="HVW"/> | Herman van der Wee argues that the dramatic growth in the consumer market that grew exponentially in the latter half of the 20th century has its origins in the changing socio-economic objectives of US, Western European countries and Japan in the afternmath of World War II when economic prosperity became central to government coordination. He argues that these governments constructed the modern consumer economy by powerfully facilitating a growth in demand.<ref name="HVW">{{cite web|author=Herman van der Wee|title=Prosperity and upheaval: the world economy, 1945-1980|publisher=University of California Press|year=1986|page=243|isbn=0520058194}}</ref> This was directly achieved with increasing wages and giving employees a surplus beyond the basic costs of living which gave people a growing capacity to indulge in leisure, tourism, fashion and personal transport.<ref name="HVW"/> As a result, the demand for consumer goods grew, and investment in the private sector thus increased, generating new jobs to meet the growing consumer demand. This in turn had the knock-on effect of increasing the size of the consumer market by employing new people who in turn would have enough money to spend on goods and the economy would continue to grow at an exponential rate.<ref name="HVW"/> |