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Britain 1945 - 1990
Descripción
History Mapa Mental sobre Britain 1945 - 1990, creado por ChristianLowe el 27/04/2013.
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history
Mapa Mental por
ChristianLowe
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Creado por
ChristianLowe
hace más de 11 años
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Resumen del Recurso
Britain 1945 - 1990
Attlee, Churchill and Eden 1945-1957
Clement Attlee
General Election 1945 Labour - 393 Conservative - 213
Acts and Reforms
National Insurance Act 1946
National Health Service Act 1946
Town and Country Planning Act 1947
750,000 new homes by 1948
Beveridge Report
Key Figures
Aneurin Bevan
'I stuffed their mouths with gold.'
John Maynard-Keynes
Consensus interventionist policy up until Thatcher 1979
Secures American loan of $3.75 billion
Economy
Nationalisation
Marshall Aid
Balance of Payments deficit
Davaluation of the £
Exports still rose from £266 million in 1944 to £2.2 billion in 1950
Winston Churchill
General Election 1951 Labour - 295 Conservative 321
Key Figures
Richard Austen Butler
'Butskellism' economic policy as Chancellor of the Exchequer
Harold Macmillan
Built 318,000 houses between 1952-52 as Minister for Housing
Economy
Continuation of Balance of Payments crisis
Butler's proposal to let the pound float rejected
Labour division in opposition between Attlee/Gaitskell and Bevan
Anthony Eden
General Election 1955 Labour - 277 Conservative - 345
Suez Crisis
Nasser nationalises the Suez Canal in July 1956
Secret deal between Britain, France and Israel. Israel invade Sinai, Britain intervenes as peacekeepers
Despite superb military planning, Britain withdraws due to US conditions regarding financial help
Macmillan and Wilson 1957-1970
Harold Macmillan
General Election 1959 Labour - 258 Conservative - 365
Key Figures
Richard Austen Butler
Pushed through reforms to prostitution in Street Offices Act, and then the Commonwealth Immigration Act 1962 in post at Home Office
Chancellors
Peter Thorneycroft
Early proposals of monetarism rejected by Macmillan, resigns alongside Powell
Derick Heathcote-Amory
'Giveaway budget' 1959 reduces income tax down to 40p - election winning budget
Selwyn Lloyd
Disastrously unpopular budget in 1962 - tax on sweets and ice cream
Reggie Maudling
Keynesian expansionist - April 1963 budget saw £260 million tax cuts
Economy
Continuation of Balance of Payments deficit
'Britain never had it so good' July 1957
Macmillan remains staunchly fiscal and Keynesian throughout his office
Overall - Wages increased, home ownership increased by 44% and increased consumption of white goods, yet share of trade fell to only 15%.
Macmillan attempts to join EEC but De Gaulle continuously vetoes application
Labour critically divided between Bevanites and Gaitskellites over CND and Clause 4
Profumo Affair 1962
'Night of the Long Knives' July 1962 - huge cabinet reshuffle but damages Macmillans image of calm
Harold Wilson
General Election 1964 Labour - 317 Conservative - 304
Key Figures
Roy Jenkins
Notable social reforms as Home Secretary. Prominent Labour politician for next 20 years
Barbara Castle
'In Place of Strife' paper developed in 1968 to crack down on Trade Union dominance. Rejected by left wing party members.
Notable Social Reforms
Capital Punishment abolished in 1969
Sexual Offences Bill 1967 legalises homosexuality
Race Relations Act 1966 establishes Race Relations Board to investigate complaints of discrimination
Jennie Lee launches the Open University in 1971
Theatres Act 1968 abolishes stage censorship
Economy
Despite a large BoP deficit, Wilson consistently rejects devaluation and keeps the £ at $2.80
October 1967 saw worst monthly trade deficit in British history
Wilson forced to devalue £ to $2.40
Trade surplus recorded in 1969
Second attempt to join Europe again rebuffed by De Gaulle
Wins re-election in 1966 with increased majority
Heath, Wilson and Callaghan 1970-1979
Ted Heath
General Election 1970 Labour - 288 Conservative - 330
Provisional IRA becomes active in Ulster - beginning of the 'Troubles'
'Bloody Sunday' 1972 - 26 civillians killed by British soldiers
Miners Strikes 1971-72
Miners demand huge pay rises to combat inflation
'Flying pickets' under direction of Arthur Scargill force closure of power stations and depots.
Government submit due to rapidly decreasing coal stocks and agree to miners' demands. Huge public image disaster for the Government
Britain finally gains entry into the EEC in 1973
Arab-Israeli War causes price of oil to rocket. Britain must rely on domestic coal
Government calls a 3 day working week in response to further strikes by miners.
British output only fell by 5%
Harold Wilson (2nd Term) and Jim Callaghan
General Election 1974 Labour - 319 Conservative - 277
Parliament wide divisions over Europe - Wilson calls referendum in 1975
Small Yes majority retains membership
NO - Tony Benn and Michael Foot
YES - Roy Jenkins and Ted Heath
Economy
By 1975 inflation reaches 27%, house prices drop 16%
Healey resorts to $3 billion loan from IMF - national humiliation for Britain
Huge action by Unions demanding inflation-busting raises
1978-79 'Winter of Discontent' - disastrous strikes by rubbish men, grave diggers, lorry drivers and health service workers
Callaghan - 'Crisis? What crisis?'
Wilson retires 1976 to be replaced by Callaghan
Thatcher 1979-1990
Margaret Thatcher
General Election 1979 Labour - 269 Conservative - 339
General Election 1983 Labour - 209 Conservative - 397
Miner's Strike 1984-85
Governments closure of uneconomic pits leads to forced strike action directed by Scargill
Called strike in Spring 1984 - proved to be a critical mistake
'Battle of Orgreave' 1984 - public opinion seems to turn pro-government
Government coal stocks outlast strikers. Strike called off March 1985
General Election 1987 Labour - 229 Conservative - 376
Poll Tax
Everyone pays standard 'community charge' - old system based on property valuation scrapped
Hugely unpopular with the public. Large scale rioting resulted.
Disagreements and significant resignations from Nigel Lawson, Michael Hesaltine and most critically, Geoffrey Howe
Labour in Opposition
Michael Foot as leader 1979-83
Foot leads a revival of hard Leftism in the party followed by a rise of socialism across the North in local councils
Right-leaning SDP lead by Roy Jenkins splits from the Labour Party
SDP gains significant seats in 1983 election at the expense of Labour
Neil Kinnock replaces Foot as leader after disastrous election defeat
Northern Ireland
Northern Ireland 'Troubles' runs through whole decade
Bombing of Grand Hotel in 1984 Tory Party Conference
Falklands War 1982
Thatcher wins conflict outright - huge election-winning boost in popularity
Key Figures
Geoffrey Howe
Chancellor, and loyal Thatcherite
Arthur Scargill
National Union of Miners leader and Thatcher nemesis throughout the Miners Strikes of 1973-74
Economy
Free-Market Economics
Monetarist Policy - Control of money supply largely via interest rates
Emphasis on 'small government' - little government intervention in the economy. A huge break from the consensus approach of Keynesian economics
Large-scale Privatisation - Utilities (Gas/Water/Electricity) airlines, communications, motor companies (Jaguar/Rolls Royce) and coal industry
Large number of public become shareholders
Howe's first budget 1979
Income tax reduced, especially for the rich - 83% down to 60%
Interest rate raised to 14% to lower inflation
Resulted in huge reduction in inflation (down to 5% in 1983) but also Brixton riots and mass unemployment
Ousted by Party in 1990 who feared she was an electoral liability
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