Britain's Relative Economic Performance, 1870-1999

Britain's Relative Economic Performance, 1870-1999
Author: N. F. R. Crafts
Publisher: Institute of Economic Affairs
Total Pages: 138
Release: 2002
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN:

Judgments about Britain's economic performance are constantly being made, often based on inadequate evidence. In this paper, Professor Nicholas Crafts, one of Britain's leading economic historians, assembles the evidence, places recent performance in a long run context and makes informed judgements about whether Britain is suffering from absolute or relative decline. His book is a mine of information about economic trends since the 1870s, giving details of the GDP, productivity, investment, educational attainment, taxation and other statistics which are relevant if proper assessments of economic performance are to be made. One of his conclusions is that the economic reforms which began with the Thatcher governments, and which have broadly been continued under New Labour, have made a difference, avoiding some of the 'government failures' of earlier years. How managers respond to the revolution in information and communications technology is now a key factor in determining Britain's future performance.

The Decline of Industrial Britain

The Decline of Industrial Britain
Author: Michael Dintenfass
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 159
Release: 2006-02-01
Genre: History
ISBN: 1134937474

Michael Dintenfass provides a challenging account of Britain's economic performance since 1870. He combines a succinct, clearly-written survey of recent scholarly work in British economic and business history with an original interpretive alternative to the institutionalized accounts of Britain's relative decline. Dintenfass addresses both specifically economic questions and socio-historical questions to place Britain's economic history in its broadest context.

Understanding Decline

Understanding Decline
Author: P. F. Clarke
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 336
Release: 1997-12-11
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9780521563178

The theme of British economic decline is inescapable in contemporary debates about Britain's economic performance and sense of national identity. Understanding Decline is a serious contribution to an important argument, approached in a way that is accessible not only to the specialist academic market but to students of economics, history and politics. Barry Supple, to whom the volume is dedicated, when Professor of Economic History at Cambridge was concerned with various aspects of this historical problem. Indeed, his 1993 Presidential Address to the Economic History Society, 'Fear of failing', already a classic, is reprinted here as a highly effective keynote essay. Other essays pick up this theme in diverse but essentially unified ways, seeking to assess British economic performance in different ways over the past two centuries. They include case-studies through which the reality of decline can be explored, while differing perceptions of decline are examined in a number of essays dealing with ideas and policy issues.

The British Industrial Decline

The British Industrial Decline
Author: Michael Dintenfass
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 247
Release: 2002-11
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1134692625

This book sets out the present state of the discussion of the decline in British industry and introduces new directions in which the debate is now proceeding.

Britain in Decline

Britain in Decline
Author: Andrew Gamble
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release:
Genre: Electronic books
ISBN: 9781350363472

"For a hundred years, Britain's decline as a great power has gone hand in hand with the relative decline of the British economy. Andrew Gamble's much acclaimed book provides a historical account of Britain's rise and fall and a succinct introduction to the main explanations of decline and political strategies for reversing it. The fourth edition has been updated throughout and a new concluding chapter assesses the state of debate and of the British economy after the Thatcher decade."--