New Labour's Faustian Pact?

被引:0
作者
Eric Shaw
机构
[1] University of Stirling,Division of History and Politics
来源
British Politics | 2012年 / 7卷
关键词
New Labour; Blair government; financial regulation; labour economic policy;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
While there has been much discussion, within the discipline, of New Labour's political economy, a notable omission has been its policy on the City, despite its critical importance. This article is an attempt to fill this gap. It argues that the Blair government's policy of light-touch financial regulation both rested on and reflected its commitment to a financial growth model inherited from the Conservatives in which the key driver of UK economic expansion was a dynamic, fast-expanding and lightly regulated financial sector. The policy can also be seen as a ‘Faustian Pact’ with the City whose earnings, it was calculated, would be a major source of the tax revenues needed to rebuild Britain's fading welfare state. The article examines the principles and precepts which underpinned the policy of light-touch financial regulation and then investigates the reasons for its adoption. It contends that these were as much ideological – a genuine commitment to key tenets of the liberal market variant of capitalism – as structural and institutional. After a decade of sustained economic expansion that appeared to validate it the intellectual foundations of light-tough financial regulation were demolished by the financial crisis of 2007–2008 thereby severely denting the credibility of New Labour's political economy.
引用
收藏
页码:224 / 249
页数:25
相关论文
共 40 条
  • [11] Hay C(2008)What will follow the demise of privatised Keynesianism? Political Quarterly 79 S302-315
  • [12] Corry D(2004)Breaking the path of institutional development? Alternatives to the new determinism Rationality and Society 16 5-43
  • [13] Crouch C(2010)Reappraising New Labour's political economy Political Quarterly 81 S46-S52
  • [14] Crouch C(2004)Prosperity and fairness? British Journal of Politics and International Relations 6 213-230
  • [15] Crouch C(2011)‘O brother, where art thou?’ The Labour party leadership election of 2010 British Politics 6 283-316
  • [16] Farrell H(1996)Culture as a foundation concept for the social science Journal of Theoretical Politics 8 471-497
  • [17] Denham J(2009)British politics and the financial crisis British Politics 4 450-462
  • [18] Dolowitz D(2010)New Labour and political change Parliamentary Affairs 63 639-652
  • [19] Dorey P(2004)The normalizing role of rationalist assumptions in the institutional embedding of neoliberalism Economy and Society 33 500-527
  • [20] Denham A(1998)Structure, agency and historical institutionalism Political Studies 46 951-957