Thatcher debates Flashcards
How did Thatcher’s economic policies positively affect Britain?
Her free market policies reversed Britain’s relative economic decline
How did Thatcher’s economic policies negatively affect Britain?
- Her policies did little to change Britain’s long-term economic performance.
- Her economic policies weakened British industry.
- She unbalanced Britain’s economy and created massive inequality of wealth
How did Thatcher’s Lack of state intervention positively affect Britain?
- The state intervened less in the economy and in people’s lives than had been the case in the previous decades.
- She was willing to put theory into practice. Market forces & individual freedom were allowed to determine whether industries failed or succeeded
How did Thatcher’s Lack of state intervention negatively affect Britain?
- She ultimately failed to prevent the state from growing throughout the 1980s
- The cost of welfare and maintaining law and order actually went up.
How was the extent of political and social division in Britain already occurring before Thatcher?
Social division was actually the result of longer-term economic and social changes.
How did Thatcher affect the the extent of political and social division in Britain?
- There were the deepest social divisions in Britain, at the end of the 1980s, than there had been since the end of WW2.
- There were riots, industrial conflict, protest movements and controversy over Section 28 and the British response to AIDS.
- Thatcher’s economic policies were responsible for the social division in the country.
How did other factors (not Thatcher) affect the development of the Tories?
- The transition and shift in UK Politics was not purely down to Thatcher
- A shift away from the left-wing politics and economics actually began during the 1970s
- In terms of the Labour Party, the ideological shift in the Party actually began in 1956 with the publication of Anthony Crosland’s The Future of Socialism
How did Thatcher affect the development of her party?
- Thatcherism led to a transformation of the Conservatives & even the Labour Party.
- Her ability to win three successive general elections demonstrated that she was able to create a style & put forward ideas and policies that struck a chord with a lot of Britain
- Electoral success in 1979, 1982 and 1987 forced Labour to go through a series of ideological transformations, most significantly from 1994 onwards under the leadership of Tony Blair who rebranded the Party as “New Labour”