------------ EH.NET BOOK REVIEW --------------
Published by EH.NET (September 2005)
Nicholas Woodward, _The Management of the British Economy,
1945-2001_. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2004. xi + 305
pp. �49.99 (hardback), ISBN: 0-7190-4979-2.
Reviewed for EH.NET by Catherine R. Schenk, Department of Economic
and Social History, University of Glasgow.
To scholars and students of post-war British economic history, the
title of this textbook will evoke the classic study by J.C.R. Dow,
_The Management of the British Economy, 1945-60_ (Cambridge
University Press), first published in 1964. Twenty years later this
book was still a standard account of its period, blending analysis of
policy with an assessment of economic performance in the 1950s.
Woodward consciously chose his title to echo Dow's emphasis on the
importance of economic policy formation in the era of demand
management. The supply of textbooks on the post-war British economy
has swelled recently. Cairncross partly replaced Dow in 1985 with his
insider's account of _Years of Recovery; British Economic Policy,
1945-51_ (Methuen, 1985) and then _The British Economy since 1945_
(Blackwell, 1995). The latter does not appear in Woodward's
bibliography. Middleton's shorter _The British Economy since 1945_
(Macmillan, 2000) blends policy and economic analysis for
undergraduate students. In 1991, Woodward himself edited a textbook
with Crafts on _The British Economy since 1945_ (Oxford University
Press) which drew together a range of scholars and approaches. The
present volume adds to this collection of textbooks by bringing the
period of analysis up to the end of the twentieth century.
The book is arranged chronologically and the chapters loosely follow
a similar structure. After a brief survey of the period there is a
description of the 'policy machine,' which reviews the individuals
and departments/offices that were important to policy-making. There
then follows a description and evaluation of policy. The chapters on
the 1950s and 1960s separate the description of policy into
'financial policy,' which is a mixture of fiscal policy and incomes
policy, and then 'supply-side policy,' which includes the various
development councils and other initiatives. There is very little
reference to monetary policy until the 1980s, despite the active use
of bank rate and controls on bank lending in the 1950s and 1960s. As
in most textbooks there is a useful glossary and calendar of events
to guide students.
This is an overwhelmingly domestic account of policy-making with
brief side references to such key developments as European
integration, Anglo-American or Commonwealth relations. There is no
account of the changes in Britain's international trade and
investment patterns over the period despite substantial shifts that
influenced the evolution of the economy and economic policy-making.
On the other hand, the analysis does not unpack the domestic British
economy into its constituent parts or regions. The analysis
implicitly fits into the 'decline-ist' view of Britain's post-war
economic performance but does not delve into comparative indicators.
Woodward concludes that economic policy broadly failed to achieve its
goals of relatively low unemployment and low inflation, at least
until 1990s. This was due to weaknesses among individual
policy-makers and mistakes by the Treasury, as well as political
pressures and the constraints of public opinion on what was feasible.
More substantially, he blames the targets of policy-making; wage
restraint and Keynesian demand management in the 1960s and 1970s, and
intermediate targets (money supply and then exchange rate) in the
1980s. He is more optimistic about Tony Blair's Labour governments
in the 1990s, going so far as to suggest this period of inflation
targeting has been the most successful period of policy-making since
1945.
In sum, this is a useful but not essential addition to the existing
list of textbooks on this topic. It will be easily understood by
first and second year undergraduates but will need to be supplemented
by more thorough accounts of the development of the economy itself
and of international economic relations.
Catherine R. Schenk is Professor of International Economic History at
the University of Glasgow. She has published widely on British
post-war economic history, the development of the international
monetary system and the economic history of Hong Kong. She is
currently engaged on projects assessing British management of the
decline of sterling in the 1960s and 1970s and analyzing the
competitiveness of the Hong Kong banking system. She will be a
visiting research fellow at the Hong Kong Institute for Monetary
Research and Visiting Professor at the University of Hong Kong in
2005.
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