National Aptitudes for Planning in Britain, France, and Italy
- 1 October 1974
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Government and Opposition
- Vol. 9 (4), 397-410
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1477-7053.1974.tb00894.x
Abstract
THE COMPARATIVE STUDY OF NATIONAL ECONOMIC PLANNING WAS fashionable in the 1960s at a time when the French model had become extremely popular in Western Europe. However, analyses of planning experience were then generally inhibited by a preoccupation with descriptions of the formal planning procedures rather than with any serious attempt to assess anything but the economic consequences of planning. (Andrew Shonfield's classic study of Modern Capitalism was a conspicuous exception to this criticism.) Attention was focused on plans as official documents rather than upon a set of planning practices that might be only remotely related to any formal statement of public policy. Planning was viewed too much from the forecasting end rather than the implementation end and the rationality of objectives became more of a preoccupation than the practical problems of translating them into reality. A normative model of efficient decision-making was all too often assumed to be readily transposable because of a wholly unrealistic notion of the ways in which organizations work.Keywords
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- Government and IndustryPublished by Bloomsbury Academic ,2011