The Pit and the Pendulum: A Co-operative Future for Work in the Welsh Valleys
By (Author) Molly Scott Cato
University of Wales Press
University of Wales Press
2nd July 2004
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
331.1378220943
Paperback
256
Width 156mm, Height 224mm
499g
The Pit and the Pendulum presents a detailed introduction to the local economy of Rhondda-Cynon-Taff and an account of the history of the region's inward investment development strategy. The Valleys area has suffered a sustained period of economic depression, which intensified following the pit closures of the 1980s and 1990s. Successive economic development policies have failed to regenerate the area, exemplified most recently by the ill-fated involvement of global corporations with the South Wales economy. Molly Scott Cato argues that the explanation for this failure is the inherent conflict between competitive and individualist economic models and the community-based culture of the Valleys. She offers recommendations for future policy-making, suggesting that a new approach to economic development for the area, which empowers local people to work together to make the best of the economic opportunities they have, should be adopted. As a first step along this path towards rebuilding the local economy she considers the findings of a survey of local attitudes towards work carried out in Rhondda-Cynon-Taff, focusing especially on the social valuation of occupations and local attitudes towards the inward-investment employment strategy. The book includes details of the investment by foreign companies such as LG in South Wales as well as a case study of Tower Colliery.
'This book should be compulsory reading for all politicians and policy-makers. It is recommended reading for those of us who elect and pay them!' www .gwales.com 'This is an unusual and imaginative book...a useful social document, at times academic, at times polemic, always ideologically committed. It achieves the important task of allowing people's voices to be heard.'(Planet)
Molly Scott Cato is Lecturer in Social Economy at the Welsh Institute for Research into Co-operatives, University of Wales Institute Cardiff. She is author of Seven Myths About Work (1996) and co-editor of Green Economics: Beyond Supply and Demand to Meeting People's Needs (1999).