How national planning reshapes work, goods, and everyday life for the public good. This work argues that rapid organization and state action, not private profit alone, can secure fair work, reliable supplies, and affordable living.
Drawing on wartime lessons, it examines how production, distribution, and services could be guided by national institutions. It contrasts the failures of laissez-faire with the potential of coordinated efforts in food, housing, energy, and industry. The book invites readers to reconsider who should own and run essential systems for the benefit of all citizens.
- Models of national factories, public utilities, and coordinated supply chains.
- How price controls, planning, and organization influence everyday comforts and safety.
- Examples from coal, food, housing, and transportation to illustrate policy choices.
- Implications for workers, consumers, and the future of national prosperity.
Ideal for readers of economic history and policy looking for practical, historical approaches to national planning.