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The 1940s Nationalizations in Britain: Means to an End or the Means of Production?

Robert Millward

Volume 50, Issue 2

Abstract

This article aims to account for the 1940s nationalizations and to develop a general theme which embraces the whole of British industry. It argues that natural monopoly and externalities go a long way towards explaining why transport and fuel were taken into public ownership and why manufacturing was not. The neo-marxist characterization of capitalist society plays only a limited role. Similarly the presence of a Labour government accounts for many of the institutional arrangements, but the shift to public ownership was ultimately determined by economic factors present throughout the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.


Article Type: OA
Page range: 209 - 234
Extent: 0 Page(s)

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