First published in 1973, Political Responsibility and Industry
discusses the nature of industrial policy and the capacity of the
British governmental system to conduct it. This theme is illustrated
by particular examples of the working of government-industry relations
with which the author was intimately connected, such as the aluminium
smelter project and the textile industry enquiry; and by discussion of
particular instruments of industrial policy such as the Industrial
Reorganisation Corporation and the Geddes Report on shipbuilding. The
author is critical of the tendency to regard industrial policy as some
new catalyst of industrial growth. He describes it, at its best, as
simply ‘casework in the public interest’. In a penetrating
analysis of the machinery of government in Britain, he shows that this
is inadequate as an instrument for the effective control of industrial
policy. This in turn leads on to a discussion of the ‘myth of
ministerial responsibility’ which, the author suggests, rather than
locating effective responsibility for policy, ensures that it is not
located anywhere at all. The arguments presented should be of interest
not only to those concerned with Government-industry relations, but to
anyone worried about the working of Parliamentary government in
Britain.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781040303443
Publisert
2024
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Taylor & Francis
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter