Austin Mitchell's book is the first comprehensive study of the rise fall & consequences of neoliberalism in Britain & New Zealand the two countries which adopted the new economics most enthusiastically became its poster boys in the eyes of right-wing economists & media & suffered the most severe consequences Growing up in the affluent years of a post-war settlement which brought full employment economic growth & a welfare state to both countries Mitchell entered Parliament in 1977 as Labour MP for Grimsby just as the Settlement was failing It fell apart because of balance of payments problems & the industrial struggles of what was becoming a zero-sum competition between social groups This began the long march down dead-end street first in Britain under Margaret Thatcher then in New Zealand under Roger Douglas & the 1984 Labour government Monetarism the triumph of markets the pruning of the state & particularly its welfare provisions & the belief in tax cuts to incentivise the wealthy all combined to turn Mitchell's long service in Parliament into a fighting retreat The social balance of both countries was shifted to wealth & finance away from industry & the people The rich took their revenge Mitchell chronicles the consequences in low growth zero-sum politics growing poverty & increasing inequality He demonstrates how neoliberalism has failed to deliver on its promises & how wealth has trickled upwards not down He concludes with the turning of the tide by a peasant's revolt leading to governmental & policy changes in both Britain & New Zealand Ultimately he finds useful lessons in the failure of neoliberalism & points to a society & an economic policy which will be fairer for all