1st Edition

An Economic History of England 1870-1939

By William Ashworth Copyright 2006
    456 Pages
    by Routledge

    456 Pages
    by Routledge

    This is a comprehensive account of a decisive epoch in England's economic development by a leading economic historian.

    'Works of economic history often get bogged dwon in figures - so many machines, so much unemployment, often, too, they are histories of technology, not of economic organization. Professor Ashworth goes to the opposite extreme in a most praiseworthy way: his book is actually good to read. Though there are tables of statistics (eleven of them), the book is an essay in interpretation, not an encyclopedia; it enriches our understanding rather than adding to our knowledge.' A.J.P. Taylor.

    This classic book was first published in 1960.

    Part one: 1870-1914

    1. The Characteristics of the Mid-Victorian Economy

    2. The Environment of Economic Change

    3. Agriculture

    4. Mining, Manufacture and Building

    5. Internal Transport and Trade

    6. External Trade

    7. Money, Banking and Trade

    8. Labour

    9. The Economic Influence of Government

    10. The Course and Outcome of Economic Change

     

    Part Two: The First World War

    11. War Economy

    12. The Economic Consequences of War

     

    Part Three: 1919-1939

    13. The Opportunities and Difficulties of the Interwar World

    14. The Chief Economic Activities

    15. Economic Organization

    16. Public Policy and its Effects

    17. The Course and Outcome of Economic Change

    Biography

    Ashworth, William