It is commonplace to assume that the twentieth-century British economy
has failed, falling from the world's richest industrial country in
1900 to one of the poorest nations of Western Europe in 2000.
Manufacturing is inevitably the centre of this failure: British
industrial managers cannot organise the proverbial 'knees-up' in a
brewery; British workers are idle and greedy; its financial system is
uniquely geared to the short term interests of the City rather than of
manufacturing; its economic policies areperverse for industry; and its
culture is fundamentally anti-industrial. There is a grain of truth in
each of these statements, but only a grain. In this book, Alan Booth
notes that Britain's living standards have definitely been overtaken,
but evidence that Britain has fallen continuously further and further
behindits major competitors is thin indeed. Although British
manufacturing has been much criticised, it has performed comparatively
better than the service sector. The British Economy in the Twentieth
Century combines narrative with a conceptual and analytic approach to
review British economic performance during the twentieth century in a
controlled comparative framework. It looks at key themes, including
economic growth and welfare, the working of the labour market, and the
performance of entrepreneurs and managers. Alan Booth argues that a
careful, balanced assessment (which must embrace the whole century
rather than simply the post-war years) does not support the loud and
persistent case for systematic failure in British management, labour,
institutions, culture and economic policy. Relative decline has been
much more modest, patchy and inevitable than commonly believed.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781350317208
Publisert
2021
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter