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Capitalism, culture, and decline in Britain, 1750-1990Capitalism, culture, and decline in Britain, 1750-1990

Capitalism, culture, and decline in Britain, 1750-1990

W. D. Rubinstein

About this book

This is an original and controversial contribution to the topical debate on Britain's alleged economic decline. Rubinstein presents a critique of the thesis, made familiar by Wiener, Sampson, Barnett and others, that Britain has failed in economic terms because of its anti-industrial and pre-modern cultural values and class system. He argues that Britain was never an industrial economy, rather a commercial and financial one whose comparative advantage always lay in that area. He examines Britain's cultural values, class system and elite structure to demonstrate that these were unusually rational and modern by comparison with the more newly industrialised powers, and that features of the class system, such as the public schools, were actually instrumental in enhancing this competitive advantage. Emphasising the importance of the City of London and addressing socialism, Keynsianism and Thatcherism, Rubinstein provides an energetic and challenging contribution to this debate.

Details

OL Work ID
OL38889W

Subjects

Economic conditionsElite (Social sciences)HistoryNonfictionPolitics and governmentSocial conditionsGreat britain, economic conditions, 1945-Great britain, social conditionsGreat britain, politics and government, 1945-

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