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NEO-LIBERALISM AND MORALITY IN THE MAKING OF THATCHERITE SOCIAL POLICY*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 May 2012

FLORENCE SUTCLIFFE-BRAITHWAITE*
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
*
St Catharine's College, CambridgeCB2 1RLfas35@cam.ac.uk

Abstract

After 1945, neo-liberal thinkers and think-tanks in the US and UK outlined different state welfare systems for the poor, such as Milton Friedman's negative income tax. These were underpinned by a rational, economistic conception of human nature. Between 1975 and 1979, Thatcher's Conservative party abandoned attempts to develop comprehensive, state-led, paternalistic schemes to tackle poverty. Thatcherites focused instead on creating what they saw as a rational tax/benefit system which would provide a safety-net for the poor, but encourage effort and thrift. They attempted to marginalize the importance of state welfare for the middle classes, to re-invigorate the ‘bourgeois virtues’ which had flourished in Victorian Britain. A family-centred, moralistic individualism underpinned Thatcherite policies; this individualism was not precisely congruent with that of neo-liberal theorists. Its roots lay in personal sources (particularly Methodism), as well as home-grown discourses on poverty and a Hayekian fear of the state. Though Thatcherites took ideas from diverse sources, their political project had a single guiding purpose: the moral (and, secondarily, economic) rejuvenation of Britain. Thatcherism was, thus, an ‘ideology’ in the sense used by Michael Freeden.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2012

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Footnotes

*

Many thanks are due to Dr Jon Lawrence, Professor Peter Mandler, James Stafford, the two anonymous referees, and to the organizers and participants at the ‘Neo-liberalism and British Politics’ workshop in Oxford, June 2011, for their extremely helpful comments on earlier drafts of this article.

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