Between 1939 and 1945, Britain produced around 125,000 aircraft, and
enormous numbers of ships, motor vehicles, armaments and textiles.
We developed radar, antibiotics, the jet engine and the computer. Less
than seventy years later, the major industries that had made Britain a
global industrial power, and employed millions of people, were dead. Had
they really been doomed, and if so, by what? Can our politicians have
been so inept? Was it down to the superior competition of wily
foreigners? Or were our rulers culturally too hostile to science and
industry? James Hamilton-Paterson, in this evocation of the industrial
world we have lost, analyzes the factors that turned us so quickly from a
nation of active producers to one of passive consumers and financial
middlemen.
What We Have Lost : The Dismantling of Great Britain - James Hamilton-Paterson
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