Research

Britain’s Relative Economic Performance 1870-1999


SUGGESTED

Regulation

A Critique of Price Restraints in Electricity Supply and Mobile Telephones

Regulation

The 2002 edition of the IEA's series in conjunction with the London Business School about the state of UK utility regulation

One of Britain's leading economic historians offers new insights on the UK's recent economic revival

https://iea.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/upldbook138pdf.pdf
This book is now out-of-print and is only available as a download.

Judgments about Britain’s economic performance are constantly being made, often based on inadequate evidence. In this paper, Professor Nicholas Crafts, one of Britain’s leading economic historians, assembles the evidence, places recent performance in a long run context and makes informed judgements about whether Britain is suffering from absolute or relative decline.

His book is a mine of information about economic trends since the 1870s, giving details of the GDP, productivity, investment, educational attainment, taxation and other statistics which are relevant if proper assessments of economic performance are to be made.

One of his conclusions is that the economic reforms which began with the Thatcher governments, and which have broadly been continued under New Labour, have made a difference, avoiding some of the ‘government failures’ of earlier years. How managers respond to the revolution in information and communications technology is now a key factor in determining Britain’s future performance.

2002, Research Monograph 55, ISBN 0 255 36524 1, 119pp, PB

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