Protectionism and Economic Revival
The British Inter-war Economy
Michael Kitson author Solomos Solomou author
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:14th Aug '08
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
The impact of protectionism is currently a contentious policy issue. This book evaluates the effects of protectionism on the British interwar economy. In contrast to most studies of the period and the conclusions of orthodox economic theory, Kitson and Solomou show that the introduction of the General Tariff in 1932 provided a substantial stimulus to the domestic economy - a stimulus which can help to explain the trend improvement in British economic growth in the 1930s. The authors show that the tariff made encouraging import substitution and macroeconomic expansion. The empirical evidence is examined at two levels. First, a sectoral study shows that the newly protected sector of the 1930s saw an improvement in performance following the introduction of the tariff. Secondly, the large fall in manufacturing imports generated favourable effects on macroeconomic performance by helping to reduce the import propensity of the economy. The policy implication of this study is that trade policies should be constructed in the context of prevailing economic conditions and not solely with reference to sometimes inappropriate theoretical perspectives.
"By demonstrating in systematic detail the conditions under which protection can yield benefits to a national economy they succeed in lifting the usual arguments over free trade and protection on to a much higher plane. In so doing they contribute greatly to our understanding of economic recovery in the U.K. economy in the 1930s, while at the same time raising the standard of debate over trade policy in the contemporary world economy." Keith Tribe, Cyprus Journal of Economics
ISBN: 9780521071789
Dimensions: 228mm x 152mm x 9mm
Weight: 220g
136 pages