Synopses & Reviews
A provocative look at how and why Britain has fallen into decline from being a superpower in 1914 to being a third world economy in 2014 by two of Britain's leading Economists journalists
With a second recession looming, Britain is facing a moment of truth. Going South examines how the leader of the Industrial Revolution came to exhibit the features of a "developing country." The symptoms of this vertiginous plunge in the world's rankings are already starkly apparent: a chronic balance of payment deficit, a looming shortage of energy and food, a dysfunctional labor market, volatility in economic growth, and a painful vulnerability to external events. And if these are the big indicators of imminent relegation to the Third World, many smaller ones are too numerous to fully catalogue.
So stark is the evidence that it is our contention that Britain's looming relegation is not in doubt. The names change with intellectual fashion—the developing world, the Third World, less-developed countries, "emerging markets," or simply the Global South. But the destination is the same.
Britain is going south—rapidly.
Assuming that Britain faces up to its plight, there is no easy model for the redevelopment of the national economy. Whichever path is taken will be a hard one. The age of the quick fixes is over.
Review
"Elliott and Atkinson issued a prescient warning in Fantasy Island about the UK economy at a time when most commentators believed Gordon Brown's claim that he had abolished boom and bust. This book is another splendid polemic in the same mould, bursting with provocative ideas." - Paul Ormerod, economist and author of
Positive Linking and
Why Most Things Fail Synopsis
With a second recession looming, Britain is facing a moment of truth. This book examines how the leader of the industrial revolution came to exhibit the features of a 'developing country'; chronic debt, volatile growth and vulnerability to external events. Going South explains how this has happened, arguing that the time for quick fixes is over.
About the Author
LARRY ELLIOTT is the Economics Editor of The Guardian. He is the author of two previously successful publications The Gods That Failed and Fantasy Island. He is the council member of the Overseas Development Institute and visiting fellow at the University of Hertfordshire, UK.DAN ATKINSON is the Economics Editor of The Mail on Sunday. Previous to this he was a financial correspondent at The Guardian. Dan Atkinson has co-authored The Gods That Failed and Fantasy Island with Larry Elliot.
Table of Contents
Introduction: Decline and FallJune 1914: A SnapshotJune 2014: Lagos-on-ThamesWelcome to the Beautiful SouthA Century of FailureWin Some, Lose SomeInto Free Fall: The No-Strategy StrategyThe Great ReckoningHanging on in ThereDesperately Seeking SwedenAfter the Illusions