Judgements of all Kinds: Economic Policy-Making in New Zealand 1945-1984

Paperback / softback

Main Details

Title Judgements of all Kinds: Economic Policy-Making in New Zealand 1945-1984
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Jim McAloon
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback / softback
Pages:282
Category/GenreEconomic history
ISBN/Barcode 9780864738974
ClassificationsDewey:339.50993
Audience
General

Publishing Details

Publisher Te Herenga Waka University Press
Imprint Victoria University Press
Publication Date 9 June 2013
Publication Country New Zealand

Description

New Zealand economic policy between the Second World War and Rogernomics has often been criticised as insulated, inefficient and inimical to growth. Judgements of all Kinds challenges such assessments by explaining New Zealand policy-making within its historical context. New Zealand in 1945 was one of the smallest independent states, one of the most dependent on external trade, and thus one of the least in control of its economic fate. The Depression and the War provoked the development of a historically distinctive policy regime, committed to full employment and economic development. Judgements of all Kinds focuses on two broad themes: maintaining and adapting the postwar regime, and the profound transformation of New Zealand's small settler economy. Based on extensive research in official archives, this book offers a perspective from the 'engine-room', emphasising the perceptions, ideas, competing interests and external context that shaped the views and actions of the ministers and officials involved in managing, and developing, a small dependent economy.

Author Biography

Jim McAloon has taught in Victoria University's History programme since 2009, and before that lectured in history at Lincoln University. With a background in political science as well as history, he completed his PhD at Otago University. The histories of settler societies and of social democratic politics have been long-standing interests, and his publications include a regional history of Nelson and a study of wealthy settlers in the South Island to 1914 as well as a number of articles in scholarly journals and edited collections.