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Summary Edexcel A-Level History: Thatcher

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Providing an in-depth, but clearly summarised, description of the impact of Thatcher's governments on Britain. The notes are well condensed into a table format for clarity and easy reading.

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Thatcher

Her key policies:
 End trade unions in order to promote individualism
 Overcome the inefficiencies of state-owned industry
 Promote growth and investment by reducing regulations and lifting
the tax burden on successful businesspeople
 Foster a greater sense of public participation in the economy
through ownership of shares and property

The Fight Against Inflation
Inflation  1978: inflation stood at 11% but had doubled to 22%
by 1980 – largely due to spiralling pay demands
 Thatcher refused to print money to cover inflation as
it punished her ‘careful savers’ and rewarded
‘reckless borrowers’
 Continued with the policies of her predecessors
- Awarded public sector workers 25% pay rise
- Allowed an above-inflation pay settlement of 16%
to end a steel strike
Imposition of  To control how much money was in circulation
Monetarist  Supply-side politics introduced to replace monetarism
Policies In  Divided the government
1980 and its
Impact
Monetarist  Cut government expenditure
1981 Budget  Increased indirect taxes- a packet of cigarettes rose
from 14p to 80p
 Monetarist policy
 Took £4b out of the economy
Effect of the  Riots in several cities – Brixton in London
1981 Budget  1980-81 – manufacturing production fell by 14%
 1982 – unemployment had risen to over 3m
 Inflation stays single digits for the rest of the 80s

Successes in Dealing with Failures in Dealing with Inflation
Inflation
ü Reduced to single figures and û Monetarist policies caused
remains here for the majority of unemployment to spike over
her time in office 3m in 1982
ü Took £4b out of the economy û Social unrest – riots in Brixton
ü GDP began to grow from -0.7% û Manufacturing production fell
in the first quarter of 1981 to û Cabinet split
1.3% by the second quarter of û Unemployment benefits forced
1982 up government spending
û 1979 inflation was 10.3% and
was 10.9% in 1990 – no real
change

, û 1980 – inflation rose to 22%
û 1980-81 – Britain may have lost
as much as 25% of its
manufacturing base
 Popular Capitalism – idea that everyone in society should have
the opportunity to own property and own shares in companies,
aiming to create a wide spread of privately owned wealth
 Supply Side Economics – policies that boost economic growth by
increasing the supply of goods and services

Privatisation
Why did  Would cut government expenditure on loss-
Thatcher think making industries and cut the number of civil
this would be servants by replacing them with private
beneficial? employees
 To reinvigorate the economy by promoting
competition and innovation
 Revenue generate by sale of state assets would
fund a reduction in tax
 Help to create a wider ownership of shares –
incentive to work harder
Privatisation  Sale of British Telecom in 1984 and British Gas
Gathering in 1986 that really saw the launch of ‘popular
Pace capitalism’
 Shares sold cheaply to ensure a quick sale and
wide take-up
- 1979 – 1990: number of shareholders
increased from 3m to 11m
Impact of  Uneven distribution of shares
Privatisation - Only 9% of unskilled male workers
- 1/2 all professional males
 Most shares went to investment firms
- Individuals owned 38% shares in 1975 but
only 20% by 1990
 Most successful aspect of popular capitalism
was the sale of council houses – over 1m sold
1979-88
 £19b raised by selling state assets that were
used to pay for tax cuts – Macmillan compared
to ‘selling the family siler’
Privatisation  Privatisation of rail between 1994-97 –
After Thatcher government continued to subsidise private
firms that operate the trains
- Government spending on trains has doubled
since 1994
 Private Finance Initiative under John Major in
1992
- Public-private partnerships designed to
inject private funding and expertise into

, traditionally state-run concerns
 Clear by 1997 that future generations of
taxpayers would have to pay a huge amount of
money to the private firms who put in the initial
investment



Successes of Privatisation Failures of Privatisation
ü £19b raised by the sale of û Uneven distribution of shares
state assets – able to fund û Failure of popular capitalism
tax cuts – only 20% of shares owned
ü BT privatisation led to better by individuals in 1990
customer service – û Privatisation of British Rail
previously customers had to had not improved service
wait 6 months for the û Led to prices increasing
installation of a BT line, faster than inflation – gas
today they are installed and water
within 15 minutes û ‘Selling off the family silver’
ü Number of shareholders went û Unemployment – 200,000
from 3m to 11m from 1979- jobs lost from coal
90 privatisation
ü Increased competition

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Uploaded on
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