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Exporting the “Gospel of Productivity”: United States Technical Assistance and British Industry 1945–1960

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 December 2011

Nick Tiratsoo
Affiliation:
NICK TIRATSOO is senior research fellow in the Department of History at the University of Luton and visiting research fellow at the Business History Unit, L.S.E..
Jim Tomlimon
Affiliation:
JIM TOMLINSON is reader in British politics and head of the Department of Government at Brunei University, West London, and visiting research fellow at the Business History Unit, L.S.E..

Abstract

This article examines the attempts by the United States to export industrial and managerial techniques to Britain in the early post-war years. It analyses the types of technical assistance offered by the U.S., the mechanisms developed to deliver this assistance, and the response of both British industry and government. The conclusion offered is that whilst there were problems of “fit” between the techniques advocated by U.S. agencies and the conditions faced by British industry, overall the reluctance of the British to embrace American techniques did not reflect a rounded assessment of their applicability so much as a series of institutional blockages and hostile attitudes.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The President and Fellows of Harvard College 1997

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References

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