Introduction At the conclusion of the Second World War, the US faced a government issue such as reorganizing bureaucratic organizations during wartime and government bonds exceeding GDP. To address these issues, a systematic government restructuring and strategic planning to reduce Federal government expenditure are required (US Accounting Directorate, 1997, p. 30). To consider the best restructuring measures, President Herbert Hoover and the Diet established the Executive Organizing Committee in 1947.
Before the Civil War, the state usually dominated the federal system of the United States. However, after the war there was a stronger national government that grew in income tax, World War I, World War II, and the Great Depression. However, the establishment of the Intergovernmental Relations Advisory Committee began in the 1950s when the state government resumed to strengthen the federal, state and local relations. With the modernization of the state legislature in the 1960s and 1970s, a new equilibrium was born in our federal system.
During World War II and after World War II, corporate R & D expenditure by the US government recorded a record high. We are the power of technology and innovation that dominates the world. Even if we enter the Cold War, we are certain that we are the most innovative facts in the world. However, in the 1970s and 1980s, this situation changed drastically. After the end of the Second World War, Western Europe finally completed the reconstruction and began resuming. Japan, which was devastated by war, combined efforts to pull himself at the forefront of innovation in the 20th century. In the early 1970s, Japan became the only country in the 1920s beyond that year 's patent application.
During the Second World War, the US government spent a large amount of capital on large-scale production capacity. After the Second World War, we continued to develop through private funding. Affordable capital guarantees the inventor's expansion power. In addition, after all, government-sponsored investment in the "Moonman" mission of the 1960s, the digital high-tech revolution brought about American rule in the early days of high technology. What happened in the UK was to create an example to deal with the destroyed empire - also known as the innovator's dilemma. If they want to survive, they must find ways to manage the transition between their current success and the uncertain future, even mature companies, industries, and even the country. As the size of companies and countries grows, their persistent size and weight become the center of the present strength. But accepting the present situation is exactly brought by many of the magnificent companies and empires.