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The persistent consequences of adverse shocks: how the 1970s shaped UK regional inequality

The economic shocks experienced by the UK economy in the 1970s brought major changes in the spatial distribution of employment rates in the UK. This paper traces the long-run implications of these changes, suggesting that they were highly persistent and to a large extent shape current UK regional disparities.

Most of the Local Authority Districts that experienced large negative shocks in the 1970s had high deprivation rates in 2015, and they constitute two-thirds of all districts with the highest deprivation rates. We conclude that neither economic adjustment processes nor policy measures have acted to reverse the effect of negative shocks incurred nearly half a century ago.

This paper was published in the Oxford Review of Economic Policy, Volume 37, Issue 1, Spring 2021, Pages 132–151. Co-author Anthony J. Venables is the Research Director of The Productivity Institute.

Author Patricia G. Rice, Tony Venables

Themes

  • Geography & Place

Published

05/04/2021

Cite

Patricia G. Rice, Anthony J. Venables The persistent consequences of adverse shocks: how the 1970s shaped UK regional inequality, Oxford Review of Economic Policy, Volume 37, Issue 1, Spring 2021, Pages 132–151

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