Ownership

Ideas

Money isn’t everything for the new generation of entrepreneurs

Over the past decade, the British people have become more entrepreneurial. Fifteen years ago, Brits were just as likely to be engaged in early-stage entrepreneurial pursuits as Germans and the French. Today, Britain has become a ‘mid-Atlantic’ economy. We may not be as entrepreneurial as Americans, but we’ve broken ahead of Germany and France. One […]

Economics

The real meaning of capital

There will come a time when not every political conversation is dominated by Brexit. And if we are not very careful, the receding Brexit tide will reveal our Conservative philosophy (small government, believing in the power of individuals and entrepreneurs, having a welfare safety net, strong economic and national security) have been overtaken by an […]

Policy

How Britain’s housing market has created a mobility crisis

The dynamics of the UK’s housing crisis are well-documented: millions prevented from getting on the housing ladder, sky-high rents for often woefully inadequate accommodation and, underpinning it all, a planning system seemingly designed to stop development rather than encourage it (most recently detailed on CapX by Sam Watling today). Perhaps less well understood is how difficult […]

Ideas

The economics of rain – why most people should not face water shortages

In 1998, Amartya Sen was awarded the Prize in Economic Sciences by the Nobel Committee for his work in development economics, but Sen is probably best known for what was essentially a political insight: that the key cause of modern era famines is authoritarian rule rather than a shortage of food. The same logic can […]

Economics

Backing enterprise is the way to show that Britain means business

This is a seismic year in British politics. But I also think it’s a seismic year for British economics. It’s ten years now since the financial crash; we’re now in a position of paying down the debt as a proportion of GDP. And it’s 40 years since the supply side reform we saw in the […]

Ideas

Uber’s IPO demonstrates the genius of capitalism

On Friday, Uber will aim to raise as much as $9 billion on the New York Stock Exchange in an IPO that could give the ride-hailing company a market valuation of nearly $90 billion. What is expected to be the biggest US IPO of the year so far has also become a flashpoint in the […]

Ideas

What Thatcher got right

Campaigning in the 1979 general election, then Prime Minister and Labour leader Jim Callaghan warned Britain of the risks of voting Conservative: “The question you will have to consider is whether we risk tearing everything up by the roots.” The Tories, he said, “were too big a gamble for the country to take”. As we […]

Ideas

How to sell the free market to millennials

The millennial generation are ever so different, apparently.  As they grow up, we’re told, an intergenerational shift is underway. Those under the age of 35 not only think differently to the rest of us, claimed Matthew d’Ancona recently, they are deeply concerned about climate change.   It’s not just that they value identity over individualism.  The […]

Ownership

The 1% own half of England. How worried should we be?

Half of England is owned by just 1 per cent of the population. That’s the eye-catching headline in today’s Guardian, based on a new report about who owns land in the UK. The figures have been compiled by Guy Shrubsole, a Friends of the Earth campaigner and author of Who Owns England? The answer, at least […]

Ideas

Stable families and home ownership are the key to reducing poverty

The Centre for Social Justice recently released an in-depth survey of people across Britain that found family breakdown was one of the most significant determinants of poor life outcomes. When someone experiences trauma in childhood, linked to an unhappy home life of familial conflict, doubled the probability of someone experiencing homelessness, doubled the probability of […]

Ideas

Stuck in the middle

Ed Miliband was onto something. Back in the halcyon days of the early 2010s, the then Labour leader made a characteristically clumsy pitch to Britain’s ‘squeezed middle’: households who definitely weren’t poor, but were nonetheless feeling the pinch. The idea may not have been a recipe for electoral success, but the numbers are bearing out […]

Technology

The EU’s censorious copyright directive will create two internets

The European Parliament’s approval of the Copyright Directive today is the end of the internet as we know it. This new regulation creates substantial new controls on what we can share online which threaten freedom of expression, undermine creativity, and cement the dominance of technology giants. The Copyright Directive will create two internets. The first, […]

Economics

Will South Africa learn from Zimbabwe’s ruin?

On March 6, Zimbabwe’s Finance Minister Mthuli Ncube announced his government’s intention to scrap legislation requiring local investors to have a controlling stakes in his country’s gold and platinum mines: “We are removing that indigenisation rule, which is discouraging foreign direct investment … We say Zimbabwe is open for business” Eleven years after Zimbabwe introduced […]

Ideas

The liberalising power of human action

Who has been the greatest force for economic liberalisation over the past 40 or 50 years? Was it Margaret Thatcher in Britain, who led the way with a programme of privatisation? What about Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, who did so much to open up an economy of over a billion people? In terms of […]

Economics

Is open access the answer to Britain’s railway monopoly problem?

The great train debate is not just a minor contretemps between the small-state supporters and scorners. It is one that has implications for millions of people everyday. You may have read other authors on this site extol the virtues of privatisation of long-distance rail and evidence this by demonstrating how it has improved the train […]

Economics

Blue-sky thinking could be the answer to London’s housing crisis

The creation of a market in air could help solve London’s housing crisis. Yes, I’m saying we should privatise the air. Don’t tell the Corbynistas. In 1961, New York City established “transferable development rights” as part of limiting density for each block. Transferable development rights allow property owners to sell the space between an existing […]

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