Book contents
- Futures of Socialism
- Modern British Histories
- Futures of Socialism
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: The Plural Modernisations of the British Left
- Part I Social Democracy and the Challenge to the Nation State
- Part II Identities and ‘Modern Socialism’
- Part III The Search for a Modernising Social Democracy
- 5 ‘A Modern Democracy’
- 6 White Heat to Interactive Whiteboard
- Conclusion: Contested Futures of Socialism in the Late Twentieth Century
- Bibliography
- Index
6 - White Heat to Interactive Whiteboard
Modernisation and Labour’s Economic Strategy
from Part III - The Search for a Modernising Social Democracy
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 May 2023
- Futures of Socialism
- Modern British Histories
- Futures of Socialism
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: The Plural Modernisations of the British Left
- Part I Social Democracy and the Challenge to the Nation State
- Part II Identities and ‘Modern Socialism’
- Part III The Search for a Modernising Social Democracy
- 5 ‘A Modern Democracy’
- 6 White Heat to Interactive Whiteboard
- Conclusion: Contested Futures of Socialism in the Late Twentieth Century
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Chapter 6 traces the meaning of ‘modernisation’ in Labour’s economic policies. ‘Modernising the economy’ to achieve sustainable growth was a consistently crucial idea for Labour from Wilson to Blair. Notwithstanding the abandonment of nationalisation, the endurance of state-led ‘modernisation’ in Labour’s economic imaginary reveals a continuing strategic role for the state, even for New Labour. After establishing this continuity, the chapter highlights a crucial change. In the 1970s and 1980s, Labour policymakers assumed that manufacturing was the key sector to ‘modernise’. Yet, under the influence of deindustrialisation, ideas of ‘post-Fordism’, and New Keynesianism, by the early 2000s manufacturing had been usurped by ‘human capital’. For New Labour, education and training became the new ‘commanding heights’ and the foremost economic priority for the active state. These developments show the ongoing influence of technocratic, social-democratic thought worlds, and thus expose the inappropriateness of shoehorning New Labour into ‘Thatcherism’ and ‘neoliberalism’. But they also speak to important, and ambivalent, shifts in British political economy by the twenty-first century.
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- Futures of Socialism‘Modernisation', the Labour Party, and the British Left, 1973–1997, pp. 229 - 265Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023