Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Conservative Dominance 1951-64
- Leadership
- Churchill 1951-55
- Eden 1955-57
- Macmillan 1957-63
- Douglas-Home 1963-64
- 1951-1955
- Leadership
- Churchill
- Background
- Age 77 years when
he became prime
minister in 1951, he
was also a well know
war time hero
- Prime Minister
- RA Butler
- Chancellor of Exchequer
- Butskellism
- Conservative Economic Policy
- Balance of Employment and
economic growth, expanding welfare
state, keeping Britain heavily
investing in Military defence (Korean
War), and develop a Nuclear weapons
programme
- Continuation of Labour aims
- Butler (right) and Gaistkell (left)
- £700 million defict
- tax cuts
- £3 million credit
- 1951 Election
- Labour had 13, 900, 000
votes 250 seats,
Conservatives had 13, 700,
00, but 350 seats meaning
that they had a majority
- Situation 1951
- Rationing had ended
- Steel denationalised
- Tories Manifesto/
Build 300,00 homes
a year
- Queen Elizabeth II became Queen
- Atomic Bomb detonated 1952
- 1955-57
- 1955 Election
- Conservative 13, 200,
000 votes, 350 seats,
Labour vote decreased
12, 000, 000, Seats 250 +, less people votes
- Leadership
- Eden
- 1956
- Suaz Crisis
- Increased
- 1957-63
- Leadership
- Harold MacMillan
- Background
- A skilled leader
and a exceptional
service record
- People have more access
to televisions, increase
access to media, so
Harold works the media
- Labelled Supermac to show
the rise of the economy
- Replaced Eden
- Situation
- Prosperity increased
- Commercialism
increased e.g
televisions, cars.
- Conservative Economic Policy
- Economically "sluggish"
- Aim to have a mixed economy and to
stick to Keysnian politics
- Stop go and stage flation
- When consumption and prices rose
to quickly, the government put a
break by increasing taxes and raising
interest rates, making it diffucult to
borrow money
- When production and exports
decline, the government would
accelerate the economy, by cutting
taxes and lowering interest rates, thus
making it easier to borrow money
- (Stagnation and inflation) Industry decline
put inflation is still rampant with the result
of the economy is it is suffering
- Britain Industrial Growth Rate
- GDP Growth Rates
- Britain 2.3, Germany 5.1
- Britains spending on defences was £11.3 billion
- NEVER HAD IT SO GOOD
- 1957
- Wages
- Wages had increased from £8.30 a week to
£18 in 1964
- Inflation climbed but never got ahead
of peoples wages (real wages)
- Credit
- Access to credit made people more able to buy
more commercial goods
- e.g private cars increased from £1.5 million to £5.5 million
- Housing
- Aim to beat Atlees 600,00 homes
- Aim to build 300,000 homes annually
- He achieved this aim, as housing minister in 1951
- Rent act
- 1957
- Had abolished the rent control
- six million
properties were put
on the market
- But the down side was rent could not be
controlled and tenants at the lower end
could no lower the high rates of rents
- Unemployment
- Unemployment in 1957 rose from 300,000 to
800,000 in 1963
- Education
- Three tier school system abolished
- Downfall of Macmillan
- Scandals
- Profumo affair
- 1961