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The Irony of State Intervention - American Industrial Relations Policy in Comparative Perspective, 1914-1939 (Hardcover)
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The Irony of State Intervention - American Industrial Relations Policy in Comparative Perspective, 1914-1939 (Hardcover)
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Embracing individualism and antistatism, the United States
traditionally has favored a limited role for government. Yet state
intervention both against and on behalf of labor has a long
history, culminating in the labor law reforms of the New Deal. How
do we account for this irony? And how do we explain why, between
World War I and the Great Depression, another leading industrial
nation with similar ideological commitments, Great Britain,
developed a different model? By comparing the United States and
Britain, Larry G. Gerber makes clear that, in the development of
industrial relations policies, ideology was secondary to economic
realities-the structure of business, the market system, and the
configuration of unions. Nonetheless, industrial policy developed
within the broader context of the transition from the
individualistic laissez-faire capitalism of the nineteenth century
to a collectivist political economy in which the state and
organized groups played increasingly important roles while
pluralist and corporatist models contended for influence. In
Britain, where most business enterprises remained comparatively
small, collective bargaining between workers and management became
the norm. In the United States, however, large-scale corporations
quickly rose to dominance. Eager to retain control of the
production process, corporate elites resisted negotiating with
workers and occasionally called upon the state to resolve labor
crises. American workers, who initially opposed state involvement,
eventually turned to the state for assistance as well. The New Deal
administration responded with a series of new labor policies
designed to balance the interests of employers and employees alike.
Since state intervention did nothing to permanently change
employers' hostility toward unions, the New Deal legislation was
short-lived. Gerber's broad study of this momentous period in labor
history helps explain the conundrum of a nation with a typically
limited government whose intense intervention in labor relations
caused long-lasting effects.
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