Articles

Economics

Higher taxes won’t fix public services

Here’s something people of all parties and of none ought to agree about. If we could raise public sector productivity we could have better service for less money. Could we also agree that the failure of the public sector to raise its productivity so far this century is something we should be able to change? […]

Economics

How Britain trapped itself in a low-growth doom loop

Britain is stuck in a growth ‘doom loop’. Public spending has ballooned, taxes are at a 70-year high and the same pattern repeats each year. The result is a country that works harder, pays more and gets less. It’s a policy environment that is hitting business hard at all levels, and is toxic for young […]

Economics

Flexible working isn’t a free lunch

Before Covid, flexible work was an unusual perk. But as lockdown upended our way of life, the drive for working when, where and how an employee chooses accelerated. Insofar as there has been a return to the pre-pandemic era, it has been limited. In some quarters, the idea that workers might be obliged to follow […]

Economics

Britain’s planning system is killing growth

Everyone talks about growth. How we don’t have it. How we desperately need it. From the Global Financial Crisis to war-induced energy crises to trade-crashing tariffs at the clicks of American fingers, our economy seems forever at the mercy of worldly vicissitudes. International onlookers could not be faulted for thinking that, for the past 18 […]

Ideas

How to build a house in twenty-four hours

This is an excerpt, reprinted with permission, from ‘The Origins of Efficiency’ by Brian Potter, published by Stripe Press. In his book, Potter argues that finding ways to produce goods and services in less time, with less labour, using fewer resources is the force behind some of the most consequential changes in human history. Here […]

Economics

The case for a Public Sector Productivity Act

This article is the latest in a fortnightly series of policy proposals from John Penrose and the Centre for Small State Conservatives. You can read the previous instalments here: Only Thatcher-sized reforms will end Britain’s malaise Britain’s benefits system is unfair for all involved Labour’s change to Ofwat doesn’t hold water The fiscal farce that’s […]

Economics

It’s time to reverse Britain’s stagnation

Stand back and look at the economic trends across the decades and it’s evident that the UK is stagnating at best and collapsing at worst. Because of this, you are £10,700 a year poorer, Britain faces being a diminishing country in the world and for the first time ever the younger generation(s) are set to be […]