The Decline of British Economic Power Since 1870This book was first published in 1981. |
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1 Balance of Payments and Export of Capital in the UK 1861-1913. 2 World Exports of Manufactured Goods. 3 Average Annual Rates of Growth of Selected Indices of the UK Economy 1860-1913. 4 Comparative Long-Term Rates of Growth ...
1 Balance of Payments and Export of Capital in the UK 1861-1913. 2 World Exports of Manufactured Goods. 3 Average Annual Rates of Growth of Selected Indices of the UK Economy 1860-1913. 4 Comparative Long-Term Rates of Growth ...
Page 2
Thereafter, the growth rate revived (2-7 per cent per annum 1899-1913) but this was due to a combination of unprecedentedly high capital exports and an adverse movement in the terms of trade. For an industrial economy which had come to ...
Thereafter, the growth rate revived (2-7 per cent per annum 1899-1913) but this was due to a combination of unprecedentedly high capital exports and an adverse movement in the terms of trade. For an industrial economy which had come to ...
Page 3
A more all-embracing concept applicable to the economy as a whole is that of total factor productivity, a measure specifically designed to compare changes in total output with average changes in inputs of labour and capital.
A more all-embracing concept applicable to the economy as a whole is that of total factor productivity, a measure specifically designed to compare changes in total output with average changes in inputs of labour and capital.
Page 4
... private interests,14 while for others of a more selective frame of mind the responsibility lay with particular groups and institutions within society, such as the education system, the capital market, trade unions and entrepreneurs.
... private interests,14 while for others of a more selective frame of mind the responsibility lay with particular groups and institutions within society, such as the education system, the capital market, trade unions and entrepreneurs.
Page 6
After decades of expansion the staple industries were confronted by an 'interrelated' or 'complementary' capital stock. To the extent that technical advances in one sector entailed radical changes in dependent stages of production, ...
After decades of expansion the staple industries were confronted by an 'interrelated' or 'complementary' capital stock. To the extent that technical advances in one sector entailed radical changes in dependent stages of production, ...
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Contents
1 | |
Growth and Stagnation | 24 |
Recovery on the Dole | 57 |
the Bankrupt State | 82 |
the Political Economy of Failure | 105 |
Statistical Tables | 137 |
Notes | 160 |
Bibliography | 185 |
Index | 201 |
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Common terms and phrases
2nd series American Bacon and Eltis balance of payments Bank of England Blackaby boom Bretton Woods Britain Britain’s economic Britain’s international British economy British industry capital cent coalmining Coalmining Industry competition considerable cost cotton countries country’s currency current account De-industrialisation decline deficit depression dollar domestic economic growth Economic History economic policy empire employment Europe European exchange expenditure exports factors favour foreign Germany gold standard government’s Harrod Howson ibid Imperial Preference important income increased inflation international economy interwar period J. M. Keynes Keynes Keynes’s Keynesian lend-lease loan London major manufacturing industry ment million Moggridge Monetary Policy Montagu Norman multilateral ofthe organisation output political position postwar prewar primary producing problem productivity programme protectionism rate of growth reduction reproduced by permission rise role Second Labour Government sector Skidelsky staple industries Sterling Area structure Table reproduced tariff trade union Treasury