Changing Times
«This long-awaited addition to the Oxford University Press's Economic and Social History of Britain series provides a powerful and intriguing account of British economic policy and performance since 1951. [...] This is in part a straightforward textbook, offering a comprehensive, thematic account with summaries of a wide variety of relevant literature, and a formidable array of statistics [...]. But it is more than a textbook, drawing on a wide range of economic theory as well as substantial research in the National Archives to provide new arguments on often familiar topics.»
Jim Tomlinson, Economic History Association
This is a study of how, and why, the British economy has changed since 1951. It covers the Golden Age of 1945-1973 when unemployment was below one million; when governments built millions of council houses and flats; when electricity, telephones, and gas were supplied by nationalised monopolies; when income and wealth inequality were narrowing; and when the UK was not a member of the European Economic Community. Les mer
and rapid contraction of the manufacturing industry from the mid- 1970s, Changing Times examines the transfer of assets which was effected in the privatisation of public housing and nationalised industries from the early 1980s. The role of the State changed as public investment fell. The financing of
old-age care, of state pensions, and of the National Health Service became of increasing concern and were less politically amenable to the approach of using private finance (the Private Finance Initiative and tuition fees) to fund former public obligations. Changes were made to the system of taxation, but public expenditure changed little as a share of national income, although the government now built little. Difficulties emerged in ensuring adequate housing for a growing population, and
uncertainty grew as to where future investment in necessities like electricity supply would come from. Having narrowed in the Golden Age, inequality of income and wealth widened. Environmental concerns also grew, from the local smogs of the 1950s, through the concern with acid rain from the 1960s, to
the current global concern with climate change. The financial crash of 2008 and the decision to 'Brexit' in the referendum of 2016 reduced economic growth and highlighted the extent of economic change since 1951. This is a study of that change.
Detaljer
- Forlag
- Oxford University Press
- Innbinding
- Innbundet
- Språk
- Engelsk
- ISBN
- 9780199552788
- Utgivelsesår
- 2019
- Format
- 23 x 16 cm
Anmeldelser
«This long-awaited addition to the Oxford University Press's Economic and Social History of Britain series provides a powerful and intriguing account of British economic policy and performance since 1951. [...] This is in part a straightforward textbook, offering a comprehensive, thematic account with summaries of a wide variety of relevant literature, and a formidable array of statistics [...]. But it is more than a textbook, drawing on a wide range of economic theory as well as substantial research in the National Archives to provide new arguments on often familiar topics.»
Jim Tomlinson, Economic History Association
«...there is loads of interest in every chapter even for someone who has read a lot of the economic and political history of this period.»
Diane Coyle, Bennett Professor of Public Policy, University of Cambridge, The Enlightened Economist
«... this book has many strengths. It provides a non-technical presentation of important ideas in economics and is accessible to readers with a limited knowledge of the subject. It is written in the style of a historian who presents lots of factual details based on meticulous research. It benefits from and excellent command of secondary sources including very recent publications. It covers a lot of ground very well.»
Nicholas Crafts, University of Sussex, Economic Affairs