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Subject: Economics and Finance  Book Title: British Economic Growth 1856-1973
British Economic Growth 1856-1973
The Post-War Period in Historical Perspective
Matthews, R. C. O. Professor of Political Economy, Cambridge University
Feinstein, C. H. Professor of Economic and Social History, York University
Odling-Smee, J. Senior Economist, International Monetary Fund, Washington
Print publication date: 1982
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: November 2003
Print ISBN-13: 978-0-19-828453-6
doi:10.1093/0198284535.001.0001
 
Abstract: The subject of this book is the course and causes of British economic growth from the middle of the nineteenth century until 1973. The approach is quantitative in that it is heavily statistical while being well grounded in economic theory. Special emphasis is placed on growth in the period since World War II in comparison with growth in earlier periods. The pattern of growth was U-shaped: it declined from above 2% a year in the mid-nineteenth century to zero during World War I and rose again to nearly 3% in the post-World War II period. The superior performance of the post-war period is accounted for by faster growth of total factor productivity (TFP), with total factor input growing more slowly despite a historically high rate of investment. The main exogenous factors contributing to the U-shaped pattern of output and TFP growth are identified. The scope for catching up with technologically more advanced economies increased over time, and they themselves were innovating more rapidly in the post-war period. Labour attitudes and managerial and entrepreneurial quality worsened in the latter part of the nineteenth century and improved in the twentieth century, partly because of the jolt to institutions administered by the World Wars. Foreign competition, especially in agriculture, and the exhaustion of TFP possibilities in textiles and coal mining also contributed to the decline in growth in the first half of the period. Throughout, and especially in the post-war period, capital accumulation played a reinforcing role, being influenced by, and in turn contributing to, output and TFP growth.

Keywords: 1856–1973, capital, causes of growth, economic history, growth, labour, output growth, total factor productivity, United Kingdom
Table of Contents
Preface
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Chapter One. A Quantitative-Historical Approach to British Economic Growth
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Chapter Two. The Rate of Growth of Total Output
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Chapter Three. Labor: Quantity
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Chapter Four. Labor: Quality
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Chapter Five. Capital
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Chapter Six. Factor Shares
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Chapter Seven. Total Factor Productivity
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Chapter Eight. Output, Inputs, and Productivity by Sector
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Chapter Nine. The Effects of Structural Change
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Chapter Ten. Demand
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Chapter Eleven. Investment: Introduction
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Chapter Twelve. Investment: The Cost and Availability of Finance
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Chapter Thirteen. Investment: The Forces Determining Investment in the Principal Sectors
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Chapter Fourteen. International Aspects: Introduction
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Chapter Fifteen. The Relationship Between International Transactions and Economic Growth
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Chapter Sixteen. The Rate of Growth and the Proximate Sources of Growth
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Chapter Seventeen. Causes and Consequences of the Growth of Total Factor Input and Total Factor Productivity
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Appendix
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Bibliography
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Index
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doi:10.1093/0198284535.001.0001
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Part One The Method, the Problems, and the Profile
Part Two The Proximate Sources of Growth in the Economy as a Whole
Part Three Growth and Its Proximate Sources in the Principal Sectors of the Economy
Part Four Further Consideration of Some of the Forces Affecting the Rate of Growth
Part Five An Overall View