City of London and Social Democracy

City of London and Social Democracy

EnglishEbook
Davies, Aled
OUP Oxford
EAN: 9780192526113
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The City of London and Social Democracy examines the relationship between the financial sector and the state in post-war Britain. The key argument made in Aled Davies's study is that changes to the financial sector during the 1960s and 1970s undermined the state's capacity to sustain and develop a modern industrial economy. Social democratic economic strategy was constrained by the institutionalization of investment in pension and insurance funds; the fragmentation of the nation's oligopolistic domestic banking system; the emergence of an unregulated international capital market based in London; and the breakdown of theBretton Woods international monetary system. Novel attempts to reconfigure social democratic economic strategy in response to these changes ultimately proved unsuccessful. Meanwhile, the assumption that national prosperity could only be achieved through industrial growth was challenged by areconceptualization of Britain as a fundamentally financial and commercial nation - an idea that was successfully promoted by the City itself. These findings assert the need to place the Thatcher governments' subsequent neoliberal economic revolution, which saw the acceleration of deindustrialization and the triumph of the City of London as a pre-eminent international financial centre, within a broader material, institutional, and cultural context previously underappreciated byhistorians.
EAN 9780192526113
ISBN 0192526111
Binding Ebook
Publisher OUP Oxford
Publication date June 15, 2017
Pages 272
Language English
Country United Kingdom
Authors Davies, Aled
Series Oxford Historical Monographs