Skip to main content
Has the 20th century ended yet?
The idea of the ‘short 20th century’ was based on an assumption that crises like the one that exploded 50 years ago were increasingly rare — instead, they’re increasingly common, writes KEITH FLETT
IDF tank in the Sinai, 1973

THE late Marxist historian Eric Hobsbawm wrote in his book Age of Extremes that the short 20th century had ended in 1991 with the fall of the Soviet Union, having started in 1914 with the first world war.
 
The US became the dominant superpower, and the kind of crises that had dominated the 20th century — economic collapses, wars and revolutions — were for the moment at an end.
 
Recent events have provoked discussion as to whether Hobsbawm was right and raised the question of the 20th century still being very much with us. The economic crisis of 2008-9, wars in Ukraine and the Middle East and the rise of China as a challenger to the US suggests he may have been wrong.
 
We are currently marking 50 years since the events of 1973, firmly in the 20th century, which seems very familiar in 2023.
 
The Yom Kippur war of October 1973 between Egypt and Israel led to a restriction of oil supplies by Middle Eastern producers and a significant rise in oil prices. It was this more than anything that ended the post-1945 era of cheap and plentiful energy — and the subsequent era is one we very much remain in.
 
Then on November 12 1973, the National Union of Mineworkers started an overtime ban in pursuit of a wage claim outside of the Tory government’s Phase 3 incomes policy.
 
Combined with the restrictions on oil, the impact on energy supplies was significant.
 
The sense of political and social crisis that began to develop in that British autumn of 50 years ago is difficult to grasp for those not alive at the time or too young to recall it.
 
Labour, then in opposition, was split on the miners’ action. Labour leader Harold Wilson had reported to a Labour Party NEC meeting on November 28 1973 that talks between the miners and the Coal Board had broken down. Tony Benn recorded in his diary that he pushed a policy of supporting and trusting the miners. Rightwinger Anthony Crosland, by contrast, argued that Labour should not back the miners.
 
By December 7 1973, Benn was recording: “There is a great sense of crisis everywhere.”
 
Indeed, such was the depth of the crisis that on December 13 1973, Tory premier Ted Heath announced that industry would move to a three-day week from January 1 1974. Power cuts were widespread for business and residential users.
 
We can see immediately why a largely right-wing media will be very unlikely to mention the anniversary of the start of the NUM overtime ban even though it is one of the more significant dates in post-1945 British history. It is a reminder that the history of modern Britain has been — and is — one of crisis.
 
The crisis got even worse after Heath’s announcement, perhaps inevitably. Two days before Christmas on December 23 1973 the oil price doubled.
 
Tory minister John Davies told his family “We must enjoy this Christmas — it may be our last one.”
 
The short-term outcome of these events is perhaps better known. Ted Heath called a general election in February 1974 asking: “Who governs Britain, the Tories or the unions?” The voters decided it was the latter, and Labour returned to office.
 
It was, in a sense, very 20th century — but also very much of the moment now. War in the Middle East, an energy crisis and workers’ action putting a Tory government under pressure over wages is very much where Britain is in 2023. So perhaps the 20th century is still with us.

Keith Flett is a socialist historian. Follow him on Twitter @kmflett.

Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
Karl Marx 1
Features / 14 April 2025
14 April 2025
From bemoaning London’s ‘cockneys’ invading seaside towns to negotiating holiday rents, the founders of scientific socialism maintained a wry detachment from Victorian Easter customs while using the break for health and politics, writes KEITH FLETT
TURNING POINT: The anti-cuts plan put forward by Tony Benn (
Features / 31 March 2025
31 March 2025
Facing economic turmoil, Jim Callaghan’s government rejected Tony Benn’s alternative economic strategy in favour of cuts that paved the way for Thatcherism — and the cuts-loving Labour of the present era, writes KEITH FLETT
Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer and Chancellor of the Excheq
Features / 17 March 2025
17 March 2025
Starmer’s slash-and-burn approach to disability benefits represents a fundamental break with Labour’s founding mission to challenge the idle rich rather than punish the vulnerable poor, argues KEITH FLETT
Leaders of the Labour Representation Committee in 1906. From
Features / 4 March 2025
4 March 2025
The formation of the Labour Representation Committee in 1900 marked the beginning of interconnected and contested strategies — parliamentary and industrial — seeking ways to advance working-class interests, writes KEITH FLETT
Similar stories
kathe
Culture / 13 April 2025
13 April 2025
JOHN GREEN is fascinated by a history that excavates the enormous role played by agricultural workers in recent times
Rachel Reeves
Features / 23 January 2025
23 January 2025
Britain’s first woman Chancellor delivers the same old fudge, as Labour’s commitment to economic orthodoxy, seen throughout its history, always betrays working people, writes KEITH FLETT
Harold Wilson, Tony Blair and Keir Starmer
Features / 15 October 2024
15 October 2024
KEITH FLETT reflects on the 1964 and 1974 election victories, arguing that despite years in power, Labour failed to fundamentally reshape society in the way Thatcher later would — a pattern Blair and now Starmer would follow
Harold Wilson arrives in Downing St 1974
Features / 31 July 2024
31 July 2024
JOHN ELLISON looks back at the Wilson government’s early months, detailing how left-wing manifesto commitments were diluted, and the challenges faced by Tony Benn in implementing socialist policies