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18 British J. Pol. & Int'l Rel. 3 (2016)

handle is hein.journals/bhjlplcs18 and id is 1 raw text is: 


                                      d:.   Political Studies  B     J


                                                             The British Journal of Politics and
                                                                    International Relations
The      Great British                                               2016 Vol. 18(1)3-25
                                      A                             © The Author(s) 2014
'Rebalancing' Act:                                                Reprints and permissions:
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                                                              DOI: 10.11  11/1467-856X.12063
The Construction and                                                    bpi.sagepub.com

Implementation of an                                                      OSAGE

Economic Imperative for

Exceptional Times


Craig   Berry   and   Colin   Hay


Research  Highlights  and  Abstract
This article

•  Examines  the social construction of the economic imperative of 'rebalancing' and the
   substantive policies to which it has been linked in the UK since the crisis.
•  Shows  how  the discourse of rebalancing offers a novel presentation of economic
   policy imperatives, but at the same time circumscribes the sectoral, regional and
   temporal  parameters of state intervention, as such in large part legitimating the
   current economic  order.
•  Provides a systematic assessment of progress towards the rebalancing of the British
   economy.
•  Shows  that substantive evidence of rebalancing is limited and that the rhetorical
   claim to be engaged in rebalancing is largely illusory.
•  Demonstrates  'communicative  dissonance'-a  substantial disjuncture between the
   rhetoric and practice of rebalancing.

The 'rebalancing' of the British economy has become perhaps the central motif in the public
political economy of adjustment to the financial crisis. The article examines the social construction
of the 'rebalancing' imperative and associated policies, arguing that a rebalancing discourse has
served to circumscribe the parameters of acceptable state intervention in response to the crisis. It is,
accordingly, to be seen as a temporary exception, after which laissez-faire can be restored. But is
there any evidence for such a rebalancing? In the second half of the article we assess the extent to
which its objectives have been realised in substantive economic policy change, demonstrating a
disjuncture between the rhetoric and practice of rebalancing-a communicative dissonance. This
leads us to question not only the extent to which rebalancing has been pursued in public policy, but
also the likelihood that the interventions justified in the name of rebalancing can herald any lasting
reconfiguration of the British economy.




Keywords: British   economic  policy; rebalancing; economic  imperatives; coalition
government


Introduction

Though   it has its origins in the early 2000s (Froud et al. 2011), the idea that the
British economy  is unbalanced has emerged  as perhaps the single defining motif of
official economic policy discourse in Britain since the  global financial crisis. Its

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