Public enterprise in the modern western world: An historical analysis

Robert Millward

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The aim of this article is to explain the pattern of public enterprise in Western Europe, Japan and the USA in the late 20th century, just before the onset of privatization. This requires an examination of the origins which date from the early 19th century. A common misconception is that public enterprise was a device for overcoming problems of natural monopoly and/or a socialist instrument for mitigating worker exploitation. It is argued that the former was mainly dealt with by arms' length regulation and that socialist forces were limited. Public enterprise was common in grid networks everywhere manufacturing, more common in Germany, Spain, Italy than elsewhere. Why also were the USA and UK (up to1939) different and what does the privatization experience tell us about public enterprise? The answer is that public enterprise was often an instrument for promoting social and political unification, securing national defence and related strategic considerations, increasingly in the 20th century for promoting economic growth, with regulatory failures and socialist pressures playing a more subsidiary and/or occasional role. © 2011 The Author Annals of Public and Cooperative Economics © 2011 CIRIEC.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)375-398
Number of pages23
JournalAnnals of Public and Cooperative Economics
Volume82
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2011

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