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5 - The Slow Disintegration of the UK’s Postwar Settlement

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 August 2023

David Coates
Affiliation:
Wake Forest University, North Carolina
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Summary

“People are fed up. They are fed up with not being able to get somewhere to live, they are fed up with waiting for hospital appointments, they are fed up with zero-hour contracts, they are fed up with low pay, they are fed up with debt, they are fed up with not being able to get on with their lives because of a system that’s rigged against them.”

Jeremy Corbyn

“My generation has not served its children well”.

Will Hutton

Modern economies can be very similar in their basic principles of organization and in their associated strengths and weaknesses, and still sustain very different kinds of societies. Economies have their logics, but societies also have their histories. The logics may be similar but the histories can be different – and in the US and UK cases they most definitely are. They are different in the ways in which the two societies were originally constructed and have developed over time. They are also different in the ways in which they now struggle to cope with the common set of economic problems released upon them by the shared nature of their flawed capitalisms. This overlap of the similar and the different is what allows so rich a cultural exchange between the two societies, with the similarities facilitating the exchange and the differences making the exchange perennially fascinating. Americans play baseball. The English play cricket. Nothing could be more different than that; and yet each sport carries the marks of a shared experience of imperialism. American baseball calls its end-of-season play-offs “The World Series”, although only North American teams are permitted to participate. The Japanese and the Cubans play baseball too – a legacy of previous decades of American dominance – but they are not invited. The English now regularly lose at cricket to teams from countries that only play the game because once they were British colonies. In the heyday of empire and as late as the early-1950s, the English always won at cricket, unless playing teams from the white dominions; but as this is being drafted, the national test team just lost a series of five-day games 4-0 to the Indians.

Type
Chapter
Information
Flawed Capitalism
The Anglo-American Condition and its Resolution
, pp. 149 - 190
Publisher: Agenda Publishing
Print publication year: 2018

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