|
Definition of Marshall plan
1. Noun. A United States program of economic aid for the reconstruction of Europe (1948-1952); named after George Marshall.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Marshall Plan
Literary usage of Marshall plan
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Europe: Dimensions of Peace by Björn Hettne (1988)
"Toward a Keynesian approach on a world scale for a new marshall plan This plan
would apply Keynesian policies on a world scale. The British economist John ..."
2. The Fractured Continent: Latin America in Close-Up by Willard Leon Beaulac (1980)
"The US delegation was headed by General George C. Marshall, secretary of state
and author of the marshall plan which was bringing about dramatic economic ..."
3. Making Markets: Economic Transformation in Eastern Europe and the Post by Shafiqul Islam, Michael Mandelbaum (1993)
"The marshall plan. All of the large countries of Western Europe, and several of
the smaller ones, benefited from marshall plan inflows at the time of price ..."
4. Western Approaches to Eastern Europe by James F. Brown, Robert D. Hormats, William H. Luers (1992)
"Like marshall plan assistance, foreign funds will only work if the ... Germany,
it should be recalled, received less marshall plan money than many of its ..."
5. Development Cooperation in a Fractured Global Order: An Arduous Transition by Francisco R. Sagasti, Gonzalo Alcalde (1999)
"The marshall plan was designed and carried out during the late 1940s and early
... The marshall plan, which Winston Churchill once referred to as "the most ..."