Neil Clark is a well known commentator for most of the Fleet Street dailies. This piece of his first saw the light of day in 2009, and he had given me permission to repost it here:
The dominant narrative - accepted even by many who consider
themselves to be on the left - is that Britain's economy in the 1970s
was in such dire straits that our country urgently needed a change of
direction.
Britain, in this account, was the 'Sick Man of Europe'. The unions
and inflation were out of control. Our inefficient nationalised
industries were an expensive disaster. The Labour governments of 1974-79
were complete flops. The post-war mixed economy model had failed. But
this narrative is a myth.
It's true that inflation hit 27 per cent in 1975, but this was
largely a consequence of the Yom Kippur War oil price shock, which saw
oil prices quadruple, and not a sign that the mixed economy model had
collapsed.
By 1978, the British economy was rapidly improving. Inflation was
down to single figures and unemployment was falling too. Productivity
was rising, including in the nationalised industries. North sea oil
revenues were starting to transform the balance of payments, which
showed a surplus of £109m in 1977. And in December 1978 Britain
recorded a massive trade surplus of £246m.
Britain was a contented society that had a healthy work-life balance
During 1978, Britain's standard of living rose by 6.4 per cent to
reach its highest ever level: so much for the 'Sick Man of Europe'.
"The outlook for Britain is better than at any time in the postwar years," was the verdict, not of a Labour party propagandist, but of Chase Manhattan bank's chief European economist, Geoffrey Maynard.
Bernard Nossiter, a Washington Post journalist, argued in his 1978 book Britain- the Future that Works,
that Britain, unlike the US, had created a contented society that had
managed to get the balance right between work, leisure and remuneration.
Far from having had enough of Labour and the post-war consensus,
opinion polls show that the party would have won a General Election, had
Prime Minister James Callaghan called one, as expected, for October
1978.
The so-called 'Winter of Discontent' of 1979 - which ushered in
Thatcherism - is also shrouded in myth. James Callaghan never said
'Crisis, what crisis' - that was an invention of The Sun. The strikes themselves only lasted for a comparatively short period and were largely over by February 1979.
One might ask why all this matters. It does, because if we are going
to break with neoliberalism, we need to shatter the myths put forward by
Thatcherite ideologues. We need to understand the truth which was that
the British economy performed far better 30 years ago than is commonly
believed. The mixed economy model didn't fail. We were no more in need
of Mrs Thatcher's 'painful medicine', than someone suffering from a
common cold needs a course of chemotherapy.
Acknowledging the truth about the 1970s is important, because it means that we can then return to an economic model that served the great majority of Britons extraordinarily well for over 30 years after World War Two. It was a model under which large sections of the economy - including transport, energy and most major industries - were in public ownership; capitalism was strictly regulated and made to work for the common good and manufacturing was regarded as more important than finance.
Acknowledging the truth about the 1970s is important, because it means that we can then return to an economic model that served the great majority of Britons extraordinarily well for over 30 years after World War Two. It was a model under which large sections of the economy - including transport, energy and most major industries - were in public ownership; capitalism was strictly regulated and made to work for the common good and manufacturing was regarded as more important than finance.
In no other period in British history was there such a rapid rise in
living standards. The gap between rich and poor was significantly
reduced. As the One Nation Tory Harold Macmillan, one of the architects
of the post-war consensus, famously declared, we never had it so good.
Since 1979 we have followed a very different economic path: one of
deregulation, privatisation and allowing 'market forces' to rule the
roost. And we all know where that has led us.
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