Biting the hand that feeds IT

The Register


Static Product Information Page

 The End of Politics: New Labour & the Folly of Managerialism

 

Published by: HARRIMAN HOUSE
Author: Dillow, Chris
Number of pages: 293
Group: POLITICS & CURRENT AFFAIRS
ISBN: 1905641176/9781905641178
User level: All
Objective: Reference
Date Published: April 2007
 RRP £16.99 Save 25%
  Our Price £12.74

Special Order

See the latest price and availability.


  Book Information

New Labour's distinctive idea is that equality and efficiency are partners, not enemies. This, the book argues, is an example of managerialist ideology - the belief that trade-offs between conflicting values can be managed away by clever policies, that management can replace politics.


This is not true. New Labour's main economic policies - tax credits, the minimum wage, expanding higher education and promoting macroeconomic stability - have not removed the trade-off between equality and efficiency. However, the failure of managerialism is not merely a failure of particular

policies. There are deeper flaws in it. It fails to recognize the multiple and conflicting meanings of the ideals of equality and efficiency. And it assumes that governments have knowledge and rationality that are in fact unattainable.


The book is a plea to remove managerialism, and replace it with genuine politics. We should ditch the idea that a central elite can manage away social problems, and instead debate about conflicting ideals.