Answer:
Reagan's Years
Step-by-step explanation:
The government of Ronald Reagan was enormously influential both at its time, and in the current era. Ronald Reagan enacted a series of economic reforms that could be summarized in the principles of supply-side economics: tax cuts for firms, less regulations, and privatizations to promote competition and increased production.
Reagan also increased military spending (the combination of this high spending and tax cuts led to budget deficits and more national debt) to impose more power abroad. He intervened in Grenada and Nicaragua, and his stance against the Soviet Union became more aggressive.
Finally, he promoted social conservatism, even when many of his intellectual mentors were not conservative themselves: Friedrich Hayerk, Milton Friendman, Ayn Rand or Gary Becker were liberal both in economic and social issues.