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British Food Journal Volume 88 Issue 1 1986

British Food Journal

ISSN: 0007-070X

Article publication date: 1 January 1986

126

Abstract

The mammoth proportions of Public Expenditure, its accountability, its control, must be one of the biggest problems any government has had to meet. Despite all its counselling to the public spenders, its massive efforts to scale down the spending, there is extremely little to show for it. The Departments and State Services have become so large, they have outgrown government control; they are in fact forms of government in themselves. When a body established with a definite role becomes so big and powerful, as many of the authorities in the country have become, they tend to resent any form of control over them. History has many such examples in one form or another. Where an ocean divides them, the subordinate power may seek a separate nationhood for itself, as the American colonies did a couple of centuries or more ago. They chose the right moment to rebel when the home government sought to pass on extra levy on the importation of tea, which the Colonists turned into a slogan “no taxation without representation”. The truth, however, was they had outgrown the mother country and saw themselves as a new nation in a new land immensely rich in natural resources, riches all theirs for the taking. Much of the old country understood their aspirations and in the final settlement, the British were more than generous to them.

Citation

(1986), "British Food Journal Volume 88 Issue 1 1986", British Food Journal, Vol. 88 No. 1, pp. 1-32. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb011768

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1986, MCB UP Limited

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