Economic Developments 1939-64; (complete) Flashcards
(43 cards)
What was one of the key roles of Churchills coalition government (1940-45)?
to organise the economy to take account of the enormous pressures faced by a country at war
What did Britain do after the fall of France in 1940 and why?
-France= Britain’s ally
-Britain faced Hitler alone until Churchill formed a new alliance with the United States and Russia.
-USA had wealth, the USSR weight of numbers & willingness to sacrifice them.
What was Britain’s greatest economic asset in 1940?
-its people
-GB’s adult population in 1940= approx 33m
-at height of wartime mobilisation (1943) 2/3 of adult population (i.e. 22 million)= engaged in war-related activities (armed forces, civil defence,essential industry)
What did the Emergency Powers Act of 1939 do and why was this ineffective?
-gave gov unlimited control of economy
-in first months of the war, there was little effort made to implement emergency powers w/ sense of urgency, weapons production was slow & still 1m unemployed.
-after Hitler’s rapid conquest of much of W Europe in April, May and June 1940= GB economy under severe threat
What did the Second Emergency Powers Defence Act of 1940 do and its outcomes?
-introduced more effective wartime finance and the direction of labour.
-outcome= greater centralisation of government.
-ministries set up; Food, Aircraft Production, Information & Economic Warfare.
-cabinet committees coordinated work of the separate ministries, w/ Ministry of Production coordinating supply side & Treasury being responsible for finance.
-conscription mandatory for all men 18 to 41, later extended to 51.
Who ran the Ministry of Food and Rationing and what measures did it introduce?
-run from 1940 by Lord Woolton (successful Manchester businessman), gained respect for his management of the system of rationing.
-loss of merchant shipping via U-boat attacks= reduction in food imports; necessitated rationing of food, clothing & fuel.
-food rationing introduced Jan 1940; almost all consumer goods either rationed/ in short supply by 1942.
-strong views for & against rationing; some thought it demoralising, others believed it would stop profiteering & hoarding; often called the black market
-Woolton devised a fair rationing policy, advised public how to make best of it. -disappointment that rationing continued for many years post-war, ending June 1954.
What was The Ministry of Information responsible for and how did it do this?
-was responsible for regulating publicity and propaganda.
-The General Production Division created range of war propaganda posters; many encouraging workers to be as productive as possible, suggesting it would help to defeat Hitler.
Who was the Ministry of Aircraft Production ran by and were they effective?
-ran by Lord Beaverbrook, Canadian-born proprietor of the Daily Express.
-Beaverbrook was outspoken and ruthless, but he was imaginative & got things done
-raised production level of fighter aircraft, essential for RAF in the Battle of Britain
Why was Ernest Bevin the ideal choice for Minister of Labour?
-had to oversee allocation of labour; he had a long career in Trade Union affairs before war + connection w/ ‘the shop floor’ made him the ideal choice
What were Bevin’s tasks in the Ministry of Labour and organisation of work, was this successful?
-still over 1m+ unemployed in 1940, Bevin not only had to get them back to work, but had to mobilise workforce efficiently for total war.
-Bevin given enormous powers over GB’s workforce; had to oversee allocation of workers among competing demands of armed forces, industry, agriculture, war work, civil defence & everyday civilian services.
-military conscription already introduced, industrial conscription added in the first instance for men only, later for women too. -young men, so-called ‘Bevin Boys’ conscripted for work in coal mines, women encouraged to work in munitions, engineering & shipbuilding.
-demands of war production mopped up unemployment.
-4.5m entered the armed forces, total workforce rose by 2m
-‘essential work orders’ used to force factories to improve conditions
-wages improved, Bevin paid close attention to maintaining workers’ morale; toured factories, delivered speeches to workers & managers, even encouraged lunchtime entertainment.
What was Bevin’s contribution to the war effort successful in doing?
changing public perceptions + convinced people that Labour politicians could be trusted w/ power
What was the coal industry like during the war?
-coal industry (still main source of GB’s fuel & power) = total output & productivity remained low.
-many miners attracted into other wartime jobs/joined forces as many coal mines were old, lacked modern machinery, were dangerous and inefficient.
What was the result of the coal mine industry being weak during the war?
GB had to rely heavily on oil imports, making economy vulnerable to effects of U-boat attacks on shipping
What measures were talking to maximise war production?
-priority had to be given to imports of essential raw materials & machinery
-Royal Ordnance Factories employed 300,000 workers; another 265 factories did work for the Admiralty & Ministry of Aircraft Production.
-non-essential industries run down so their machinery & labour could be diverted to war work.
-new production methods devised to raise output & save labour.
-gov encouraged greater use of science, for improving efficiency of economy & developing the techniques of warfare.
What measures did farmers take to increase home food production?
-millions of acres ploughed; production shifted from meat to cereals & greater use made of tractors to raise production.
-major Dig for Victory’ campaign, organised by Ministry of Food—> huge rise in home-grown vegetables in back gardens, allotments & sports fields
What was the impact of the Blitz?
-resources mobilised to deal w/ the impact of Blitz
-people used London Underground/Anderson shelters in back gardens for protection during air raids
-many city children & young mothers evacuated to countryside.
-gov made school meals & cheap milk available for displaced children & vitamins for pregnant women
-use of radar (invented by British physicists) played vital role in defeat of German bombers.
-the Blitz secured a sense of national unity & shared will to demonstrate collective resilience.
What were the problems with shipping during the war and how was this fixed?
-tremendous shipping losses for duration of war
-GB shipping constantly exposed to enemy attack, esp German U-boats, while crossing Atlantic to bring in food & raw materials, transporting troops + supplies to war zones & taking essential supplies to Russia. -situation eventually improved in 1944 w/ use of variety of defensive techniques.
What were the economic problems like before the post war boom of 1951?
-between 1945 and 1950, Attlee’s Labour gov faced serious econ problems; in reconstruction after bombing damage, restarting industry & restoring and sorting out how GB would meet war costs
-pre war, GB’s gold reserves= close to £1b, by 1941= fallen £3m
-Lend-Lease Act passed by US Congress, 1941 allowed GB to borrow essential supplies from USA. When this ended w
/out warning (1945) GB had huge debts, largely to USA, & unable to export sufficient goods to meet debts.
-economic problems brought a period of austerity for the ordinary British citizen.
Why was there an economic boom from 1952 onwards?
-economic circumstances of those times were largely outside political party control; Conservatives were lucky
-next decade and beyond; GB enjoyed period of prosperity & corresponding rise in living standards.
-1952+ most economic indicators pointed upwards
What were some advantages experienced due to the economic boom?
-men’s weekly wages rising; £8.30 in 1951, £15.35 in 1961
-average wages rose by 72% betw 1951-63, prices rose by 45%
-length of working week reduced from 48h-42h
-home ownership increased, helped by easy access to cheap mortgages
-new towns planned by Labour in 1940s, eg Stevenage, Crawley, Cwmbran in S Wales & Corby—> rapidly expanding
-effect of developments= overall improvement in living standards.
How did Conservatives improve housing?
-Macmillan as Housing Minister fulfilled election pledge of getting construction of 300,000 + new homes per year, by abolishing Labour’s land tax on development & promoted construction by private companies, rather than local authority contracts.
What were examples of the surge in ownership of consumer goods in the 1950s?
-televisions, washing machines, refrigerators & new furniture increase
-rise in # of televisions= colossal, from 340,000 (1951) - 13m (1963)
-massive increases in private savings
-boom in car ownership, w/ # of cars increasing from 3m (1951)- 7m (1963)
-visible symbol of economic prosperity & affluence= expansion of advertising industry esp after ITV launched age of commercial broadcasting (1955),
people became accustomed to glossy adverts during popular programmes
What happened in the run up to the 1955 election?
The chancellor Rab Butler was able to produce a ‘give-away’ budget that provided the middle classes with £1.34 million in tax cuts.
Why did farmers do so well economically?
they were encouraged by the continuation of generous state subsidies.