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Industrial Organization and Regional Development in Interwar Britain
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 March 2009
Abstract
Developments in industrial organization contributed to the lack of diversification in Britain's older industrial areas during the interwar period. The large-scale firm had not yet developed in appropriate industries to the point where large numbers of branch plants could be sent to the depressed areas (as they were after World War II), even if interwar macroeconomic policy had been more expansionary. At the industry level, barriers to new entrants and restrictive practices were high in the 1930s, precisely the period when the need for structural change in the depressed areas was most apparent.
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The study is based in part on research conducted for her Ph.D. thesis, “Uneven Regional Development in Interwar Britain” (Yale University, 1982). Financial assistance for research in Britain from the Concilium on International and Area Studies and the Department of Economics, both of Yale University, is gratefully acknowledged. Permission to cite the Nufileld Trust Papers was granted by Deloitte Haskins & Sells. The author would like to thank Michael Bernstein, Leslie Hannah, John J. Oxley, William Parker, two anonymous referees, and the participants in the Harvard Workshop in Economic History and the Workshop on Domestic and International Economic Restructuring, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, for helpful comments on earlier drafts.
1 For the best contemporary expositions of this position, see Dennison, S. R., The Location of Industry and the Depressed Areas (London, 1939);Google ScholarPolitical and Economic Planning, Report on the Location of Industry (London, 1939); and Great Britain, Royal Commission on the Distribution of the Industrial Population,Google ScholarReport, Cmd. 6153 (London, 1940).Google ScholarFor a more recent discussion of these issues, see Lee, C. H., Regional Economic Growth in the United Kingdom since the 1880s (London, 1971), especially pp. 204–05.Google Scholar
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