The Oxford History of Australia, Volume 5The postwar period has seen radical changes in Australia. Increased dependence on the United States, an influx of European and Asian immigrants, and a series of economic booms and recessions have confronted Australians with the challenge of surviving as an offshoot of European civilization in a largely Asian region and securing a prosperous future with declining support from European markets and investment. This final volume in the Oxford History of Australia details this volatile period, showing that while some Australians have resisted the pressures for change, most have adapted resourcefully and intelligently to the task of creating a new nation able to survive into the 21st century. |
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Page 31
However its reports were significant for the quality of their research and thinking ,
particularly in stressing the importance of the family farmer and the need to
upgrade the amenities of rural life if families were to put down roots in Australia ...
However its reports were significant for the quality of their research and thinking ,
particularly in stressing the importance of the family farmer and the need to
upgrade the amenities of rural life if families were to put down roots in Australia ...
Page 45
Entry into the IMF and GATT was an acceptable risk provided — and it was an
important provisothat Australia ' s federal government kept firm control of the
economy through the central banking system set up in 1945 . But part of that
legislation ...
Entry into the IMF and GATT was an acceptable risk provided — and it was an
important provisothat Australia ' s federal government kept firm control of the
economy through the central banking system set up in 1945 . But part of that
legislation ...
Page 80
This last consideration was especially important . The Menzies government , as it
must have known , could do nothing to put value back into the pound . Instead the
Korean War heightened world demand for the stockpiling of wool and drove ...
This last consideration was especially important . The Menzies government , as it
must have known , could do nothing to put value back into the pound . Instead the
Korean War heightened world demand for the stockpiling of wool and drove ...
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Contents
The People at War | 3 |
Pragmatism Ascendant | 59 |
Getting and Spending | 89 |
Copyright | |
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