The Edwardian Era [S1] [E1]  was characterized by social reforms which  laid the basis for the development of the Welfare  State  [S  1] [I  1] [F  1] after  the Second  World  War.
The  shattering experience of the  First World War deeply affected both the economic and social fabric of  Great Britain.  At the end of the war Britain  had to face the devaluation of its currency, heavy taxation to meet the  expense  of the reforms enacted before the war and industrial decline partly due  to the  updating of machinery and partly to increasing competition from the new  industrialised countries, such as US, Japan  and India.  All these factors helped to undermine the rigid certainties of the  preceding  age. Although a large majority of the population was anxious to  reconstruct a  traditional way of life according to Victorian ideals of stability and  order,  the dominant mood of the country was one of unrest.
The  depression and unemployment of  the post-war years brought poverty and hunger and an increase in  trade-union  activity. The General  Strike [E  1]  [F  1] [I  1]  of 1926 was a sign of the seriousness of the economic  crisis. The  strike involved all categories of workers and was a clear indication of  the  tension between the unions and the government.
Women,  who had partly run the  country while the men were engaged in war, gathered new strength.  During the  war they had widened their field of activity and many were reluctant to  go back  to the traditional role of housekeepers. As a consequence of this  change in attitude  and the granting of the right to vote, women’s emancipation  began. The  traditional family started to change to one in which both parents  worked.
Despite  the great changes, the rigid  class system of the Victorian Age was maintained and in a sense  strengthened by  economic factors. As the middle and upper classes improved their living  standards, the gap between them and the working classes widened.