Public and Private Enterprise

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A01=John Jewkes
Academic Halls
Author_John Jewkes
Average Incomes
Boomerang
British Transport Commission
Broadcasting Committee
business
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Cent Rate
Conferred
Disengage
economic policy debate
economics
economists
education
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eq_business-finance-law
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Follow
Free Public Supply
Frictions
Government
government market boundaries
Holding
institutional flexibility
institutions
Keynes
Land Reformers
Lindsay Memorial Lectures
Marketing Conditions
mixed economy analysis
national income
nationalization
Odd
Payments
Private Charitable Contributions
Professor Gallie
public expenditure
public versus private sector efficiency
Self-understanding Society
Smoothing
Special Purposes Statistics
State
state intervention economics
War Time
western economic systems
Western World
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367181765
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 129 x 198mm
  • Publication Date: 08 Apr 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Originally published in 1965, Professor Jewkes re-examines the principles which should determine the dividing line between the role of the State and the field of individual responsibility in economic life. Beginning with a brief account of how the functions of Government at the time had been widened in recent years and the rights of individuals curbed, he examines the fundamental difficulties in establishing any rational demarcation between the one sphere and the other in deciding what part the economist should play in helping to resolve the enigma. He next examines the outstanding failures and successes of public and private enterprise respectively in the Western World in recent years. Finally, he asks what are the dominant features of the economic world in which we live and what type of social institutions are most likely to enable us to make the best of our environment.

The author’s general conclusion is that, although mixed economics will undoubtedly continue to be the rule, yet stability and economic growth will be endangered unless our social and economic institutions are flexible enough to provide continuous, and as far as possible spontaneous, adjustments to the unpredictable changes of a world in constant transition.

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