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Mark Koyama: ‘The Laissez-Faire Experiment: Why Britain Embraced and Then Abandoned Small Government, 1800-1914’ by W. Walker Hanlon
Originally published in The Centre for Enterprise, Markets and Ethics
Economic historians have a growth preoccupation. The Industrial Revolution and its causes play the leading role in most prominent books in the field. And there are many other works that seek to explain the absence of an industrial revolution elsewhere in the world.
It is refreshing therefore to read a book that is not about the causes of industrialization but its consequences. If we reach back to the past, say, 200 or more years ago, two dramatic transformations are visible: one is the abundance of material goods and transformative technologies due to industrialization; the second transformation is the rise of large, modern, welfare states.
Walker Hanlon’s book The Laissez-Faire Experiment addresses this second transformation. He asks two fundamental questions: ‘First, how well did limited government in mid-19th century Britain work? Second, why was limited government abandoned in favor of the more interventionist government found in the U.K., and essentially all other developed countries, today?’