1b: Creating a managed economy, 1945-1951 Flashcards

1
Q

What demonstrates an improvement in economic fortunes?

A

Exports grew 80% (not difficult to grow when starting from lower).
Economic growth was 4% a year after 1948.

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2
Q

What major change occurred during the war?

A

The government took control of war production - the state became more involved in the economy.

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3
Q

What did the govt set up to control the economy?

A

Specific ministries with legal powers to intervene and take over the running of essential industries.
Ministry of Food, Ministry of Supply, Ministry of Labour and National Service.

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4
Q

What was different between how the economy was run in peacetime compared to wartime?

A

Peacetime: Production determined by prices and profits.
Wartime: Production levels decided by the govt.

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5
Q

Was this state involvement abandoned after the war?

A

NO!!!!!!!

Labour continued the state-run economy, nationalising key industries.

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6
Q

What occurred due to Britain losing the war in 1940?

A

1940: The state intervened greatly in war production, increasing its expenditure and production due to deficiencies from 1930s rearmament.
Aircraft production rose from 15,000 in 1940 to 47,000 in 1944.

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7
Q

What was military expenditure as a percentage of national income?

A

1939: 15%
1944: 53%
MAJOR INCREASE IN STATE SPENDING.

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8
Q

Who provided economic aid for the first few years of the war?

A

The USA.

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9
Q

What were American Liberty Ships and why were they needed?

A

Large cargo vessels containing coal, oil, timber and foodstuffs, as well as essential raw materials.
They were needed as U boats had sunk many merchant ships.

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10
Q

What did the American Neutrality Act of 1939 mean for Britain?

A

It meant Britain could only pay in cash.

However, cash and gold reserves had all been used up by December 1940.

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11
Q

What did Churchill negotiate after the gold reserves had been used up?

A

A Lend-Lease Agreement:

A credit agreement where Britain would pay the bill after the war - led to £4 bn worth of debt.

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12
Q

When did the Lend-Lease finish and what did this mean?

A

Britain’s economic lifeline was gone and their debt totalled £70 million per day.

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13
Q

What had the war done to the British economy?

A

It had contracted by 1/4 and trade had declined by 2/3.

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14
Q

Why had trade and exports fallen?

A

U boats had sunk merchant ships.
European and Asian trading partners were too poor to trade due to the war. This meant America dominated post-war markets.

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15
Q

What did Maynard Keynes do in August 1945?

A

He went to DC to arrange for an emergency loan - he believed it should be a gift for Britain’s war efforts; Congress disagreed.
America loaned $3.75bn and Canada $1.2bn.

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16
Q

What does the Historian Sked say about Keynes’ emergency loan?

A

“America did not seem to realise that Britain was bankrupt.”

17
Q

How did the Arctic Winter of 1947 compound Britain’s problems?

A
  1. Food shortages - 1/4 of sheep lost and root veg stuck in the ground.
  2. Coal shortages meant leccy supply was cut to 19hrs a day for homes and industry - this meant factory closures and unemployment.
18
Q

What demonstrates the dire situation Britain was in, in 1947?

A

Canadian and Australian citizens donated food parcels to Britain.

19
Q

What did Labour continue, despite its unpopularity?

A

Rationing.

  • Introduced Bread rationing from 1946-1948
  • Clothing was rationed until 1949.
20
Q

What further loan was sent to Britain, as a lifeline?

A

Marshall Money - £2.7bn.

This was a further loan to prevent Britain from turning communist.

21
Q

Was Marshall Money spent well?

A

NO.
It was used to pay for general expenses rather than being invested in industry. This meant British industry lagged behind further.
Investment in infrastructure, 1950: UK = 9% of GDP; Germany = 20%.

22
Q

What did Attlee’s labour nationalise?

A

State control of coal, power, railways, shipbuilding, healthcare, and banking.

23
Q

What was the aim of nationalisation?

A

Create full employment - unemployment was reduced to just under 300,000.
State industries would not shed jobs during economic downturn - nobody wanted to return to the 1930s.

24
Q

When were key industries nationalised?

A
Coal - 1946
Bank of England - 1946
Transport - 1947
Electricity - 1947
Gas - 1948
Iron and Steel - 1949.
25
Q

How much did nationalisation cost, and what did this mean?

A

It cost the govt £2bn.

This meant little money for funding and modernisation, storing up problems for the future.