Automatic Poverty Automatic Poverty
    • 40,99 €

Publisher Description

Originally published in 1981, Automatic Poverty provides a much-needed alternative to the Radical Right’s analysis. The book argues that Britain’s economic decline is symptomatic of an advanced stage of industrialisation in which productive processes are increasingly mechanised, but output remains static. Under these circumstances workers become redundant, the income of the working class diminishes, and dependence on the state increases. The ‘Ricardo phenomenon’ has become long-term feature of the British economy, and the author shows that neither Keynesian nor monetarist policies can remedy its consequences. It reflects a critical stage in the development of capitalism.

GENRE
Non-Fiction
RELEASED
2018
20 July
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
212
Pages
PUBLISHER
Taylor & Francis
SIZE
2
MB
Poor Parents Poor Parents
2025
Questioning Gender Ideology Questioning Gender Ideology
2023
Helping in Social Work Helping in Social Work
2022
Collective Action Collective Action
2022
Putting the Family First Putting the Family First
2022
Social Work and Social Policy under Austerity Social Work and Social Policy under Austerity
2012
Freedom and the Welfare State Freedom and the Welfare State
2018
Paupers Paupers
2018
Privatisation and the Welfare State Privatisation and the Welfare State
2018
The Strategy of Equality The Strategy of Equality
2018
The Role of Voluntary Organisations in Social Welfare The Role of Voluntary Organisations in Social Welfare
2018
The Emergence of the Welfare State in Britain and Germany The Emergence of the Welfare State in Britain and Germany
2018