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This section concludes this study which discusses the meaning and significance of both the planning debate and the eventual turn to Keynes. It explains that first of all, planning is neither Keynesian nor even pre-Keynesian. It notes that the rejection of Keynes and all similarly indirect forms of monetary or fiscal management which fall short of the fundamentals of micro-economic planning is about the only point of serious agreement among the planners. It observes that this common emphasis on physical planning is far from an indication of an accord on economic policy. It illustrates that the planning debate is in many ways the most vivid example of the ideological fragmentation which characterizes British politics in this turbulent decade.
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