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This book examines the English revolution from 1640-1660, with
particualr attenion to the social structure of England at the time.
This book examines the English revolution from 1640-1660, with
particualr attenion to the social structure of England at the time.
Preface - PART 1 HARMONY AND CONFLICT IN INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC
RELATIONS - Introduction - The instinct for national economic
security - The hard road of economic security - The costs of
economic security - The limits of economic interdependence - The
limits of international economic commitment - Economic security and
the free movement of capital - Economic security and the war of two
worlds - The Common Fund - Hayek and the illusion of a federal
world - 'Mercantilism' - PART 2 ARGUMENTS FOR FREE TRADE -
Introduction - Free trade and laissez-faire - The political case
for free trade - The economic case for free trade -
Non-discrimination - Reciprocity - PART 3 - Conclusion - References
- Index
This book provides the first detailed examination of the Attlee
government's rejection of British participation in the Schuman Plan
in 1950, which proposed the establishment of a common market for
steel and coal as a way of avoiding future Franco-German conflict.
This also represented Britain's rejection of a leading role in
fashioning European political and economic intergration. Many
received myths are contested: the Schuman Plan was not a bolt from
the blue; domestic political circumstances did not make it
impossible for Britain to join; participation would not have been
incompatible with Britain's global and Commonwealth roles. Edmund
Dell assesses Ernest Bevin's conduct as Foreign Secretary during
this last year of his life: in declining health but still believing
himself indispensable, he was arrogantly mistaken about the Schuman
plan and lacked colleagues of comparable stature able to tell him
he was wrong. The only hope was Stafford Cripps, the Chancellor of
the Exchequer, but he was on the point of resignation due to
ill-health and lacked the energy to press his doubts. Ministerial
inadequacy was compounded by the Foreign Office, the leading
officials in which were no less arrogant and quite as blind to the
implications of the proposal. The consequence was a major policy
failure which has influenced Britain's relations with its European
partners right up to the present. Edmund Dell works with archival
evidence, and the memoirs of participants, to place these events in
the context of the 'big questions' dominating British policy
formation: security, the dollar shortage, and the difficult
relationship with an American administration intent both on
attacking the sterling area and pressing for European federation.
The result is an incisive revaluation of a key episode in post-war
European history.
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