Why was the UK so unprepared for the pandemic, suffering one of the highest death rates and worst economic contractions of the major world economies in 2020? Hilary Cooper and Simon Szreter reveal the deep roots of our vulnerability and set out a powerful manifesto for change post-Covid-19. They argue that our commitment to a flawed neoliberal model and the associated disinvestment in our social fabric left the UK dangerously exposed and unable to mount an effective response. This is not at all what made Britain great. The long history of the highly innovative universal welfare system established by Elizabeth I facilitated both the industrial revolution and, when revived after 1945, the postwar Golden Age of rising prosperity. Only by learning from that past can we create the fairer, nurturing and empowering society necessary to tackle the global challenges that lie ahead - climate change, biodiversity collapse and global inequality.
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Product Details
Weight: 490g
Dimensions: 130 x 198mm
Publication Date: 23 Sep 2021
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781009005203
About Hilary CooperSimon Szreter
Hilary Cooper is a former government economist and senior policy maker with expertise in labour markets children's services and local development. Her current freelance work examines the challenges of ageing. She was the joint winner of the 2019 IPPR Economics prize for the essay Incentivising an Ethical Economics with Simon Szreter and Ben Szreter. Simon Szreter is Professor of History and Public Policy at the University of Cambridge researching economic social and public health history. His publications include Health and Wealth which won the American Public Health Association's Viseltear Prize and Sex before the Sexual Revolution longlisted for the Samuel Johnson prize. He is co-founder and editor of History & Policy.