Articles

America

Look out California – the British are coming

The British are coming! The British are coming! As the United States celebrates 250 years of independence from the British, millions of Californians wish to put themselves under British rule. The primary is taking place tomorrow, and Steve Hilton, a British-born former adviser to David Cameron, is not only expected to make it through to […]

Economics

The LSE has a lot to answer for

What have Rachel Reeeves, Yvette Cooper and Ed Miliband got in common? Yes, they are experienced politicians, with a combined total of 66 unbroken years in the House of Commons. Yes, they occupy some of the key posts in Keir Starmer’s Government and will probably still be Cabinet members after a change of leadership. I […]

Economics

We need to talk about modern monetary theory

Modern monetary theory (MMT) is an economic theory that has become popular in the blogosphere and heterodox academic circles. It’s also caught the eye of some politicians. Notably, Zack Polanski has been learning about MMT and using it to answer questions about government debt. According to MMT, the Treasury should use higher deficits – funded […]

Capitalism

Should Britain copy Norway?

As Britain debates Net Zero, energy security and the future of North Sea drilling, an older argument has returned with renewed force: that the UK squandered its oil wealth while Norway built a sovereign wealth fund worth more than a trillion dollars. It is an appealing story. If only Britain had saved its North Sea […]

To save Ukraine, we need a new Europe

Recent rhetoric suggests a slight but notable shift in Russia‘s attitude toward ending the war in Ukraine. In remarks following Russia’s Victory Day parade, Vladimir Putin stated that ‘the matter is coming to an end’. Even in its opacity, the comment signals a potential recalibration in Moscow’s approach and an implicit recognition that the time […]

Finance

Is this Rachel Reeves’s greatest achievement yet?

Rachel Reeves probably did not expect regulatory reform of ring-fencing rules to become one of her more significant achievements as Chancellor. But credit where it’s due, the Government is right to pursue serious, common-sense reform of ring-fenced banks (RFBs) in order to free up capital for investment in British businesses. Since the 2008 Global Financial […]

Economics

Time is running out for the political status quo

This week I was fortunate enough to sit down with the Rt Hon Liz Truss. We discussed the usual things you expect. The state of the UK economy, the Bank of England, the Civil Service, and to quote Truss, how ‘Power was taken from the elected and given to progressive bureaucrats and judges’. I must […]

Policy

What next for Labour – Wes Streeting or Tony Blair?

Admired for his reformist approach to the NHS, Wes Streeting is generally seen as the most market-friendly figure on the British Left. Yet his call for social media companies to be treated like tobacco businesses reminds us that even the best of a bad bunch can still be pretty awful. After resigning as Health Secretary, […]

When does a charity become an arm of the state?
Policy

When does a charity become an arm of the state?

How big is the state? It might seem like a bit of an odd question to ask and there are a number of ways you can answer it. We can look at how much it spends as a share of national income (expected to have been 44.8% in 2025/26), or how many people work for […]

Influential conservatives in Britain – including senior Tory MPs – are advocating disastrous economics
Economics

Dear conservatives, industrial policy is a dead end

It’s no secret that the strong commitments to free markets that, at least rhetorically, marked many conservative parties from the 1980s until 2015, are no longer so robust. Full-throated support for free trade, for example, is hard to find in Donald Trump’s Republican Party. Other Western centre-right parties have proved more resistant to protectionist sentiment. […]

Economics

How ‘distributionalism’ killed long-term thinking

When the Labour Government gained power in 2024, Matthew Syed proposed in his Times column the creation of a ‘Department for Long-Term Thinking’: a department that would take government out of the fog of the 24/7 news cycle and encourage policymakers to focus on the bigger picture. Although translating that idea into practice would probably […]

Nimby Watch

The Nimbys have conquered Peckham

This week, Nimby Watch is in south-east London, just for a change… Alright then, where have you brought me this week? We’re in rapidly-gentrifying Peckham, in south-east London. Specifically, we’re by the Aylesham Centre, a shopping centre that has clearly seen better days, and they definitely weren’t recent. Hang on a second, haven’t we been […]

How the private sector saved Liverpool
Growth

How the private sector saved Liverpool

The fate of the high street, and support for local communities, has just come into even sharper focus following the local election results and their consequences – of which more later. Everyone thinks the high street is important, right? Voters constantly complain that the high street is full of vape shops. Shop owners say the […]

Why elites fear common sense
Culture

Why elites fear common sense

This is an edited extract from ‘In Defence of Populism’ by Frank Furedi, published with permission. In recent times I have been struck by the frequency with which common sense serves as a target of scorn by educators, especially in universities. It is also treated with contempt by the cultural elites in the media. Common […]

Government

Has Britain really become ungovernable?

The 6-7 craze is about to turn from a meaningless, but ultimately fun, meme into something decidedly more serious: the number of UK Prime Ministers in the last 10 years. British firms and families are battling spiralling energy bills while our towns and cities are disfigured by rashes of vape shops, epidemics of shoplifting and […]

Immigration

Shabana Mahmood must not rest on her laurels

Shabana Mahmood will be pleased. New Office for National Statistics (ONS) data shows that net migration fell to 171,000 in 2025, the lowest level (outside of Covid) in any calendar year since 2008. On the current trajectory, it will fall below 100,000 for the first time since 1997 this year or next. Job done, then? […]