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Publication year 2007
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Author(s) : Hugh Pemberton, Michael Oliver,
 
UK economic policy in the 1960s and 1970s and the challenge to learning

Abstract

Between the early-1960s and the mid-1970s British governments made extensive changes to the framework of British economic policy, both internal and external. Many of these policy changes, some of them quite fundamental, which were made in these years no longer resonate; instead, the late-1970s is generally seen as the period in which everything changed in economic policy. It is our contention, however, that between 1961 and 1976 the major changes that took place in British economic policy had the potential to be as fundamental and as long lasting, and thus as significant, as those that took place in the years that followed. These changes encompassed both the domestic and external dimensions of the United Kingdom’s economic policy and, unusually, were often characterised by alterations not just to policy instruments and policy settings but by changes to the very goals of policy. For example, the early- to mid-1960s saw a concerted attempt, first by the Conservative government and then by its Labour successor, to shift Britain towards a system of tripartite economic planning in the domestic policy arena. In the process, governments amended and recalibrated domestic policy goals, with the introduction of targets for economic growth, and with higher growth itself, made the primary goal of economic policy. Alternatively, in the realm of international financial policy, one might point to floating of the pound in 1972 or, more fundamental, the withdrawal of foreign official sterling balances in 1977 and thus the downgrading, perhaps even effective ending, of sterling's reserve currency role. Both in the domestic and in the external policy arenas therefore changes took place that involved both substantial changes both to the instruments of policy and to policy goals.

 

Drawing from relevant theoretical work in political science, this paper will examine the policy changes that occurred in the 1960s and early-1970s in both domestic and external economic policy and will consider why those changes, despite their potential for fundamental change, proved to be less significant than their architects hoped. We will ask whether any part in the failure of those policy changes to fulfil their potential was played by discrepancies between the respective internal and external policy agendas.

Keywords

• Economic Policy

• British Economy

• 60s and 70s

 

 
Economic History Society's Annual Conference, Exeter, March 2007.
 

 

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