Britain gets the politics it deserves - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
英国政治

Britain gets the politics it deserves

Cakeism, impatience and low-quality public discourse contribute to the UK’s instability
00:00
{"text":[[{"start":null,"text":"

This article is an on-site version of the Free Lunch newsletter. Premium subscribers can sign up here to get the newsletter delivered every Thursday and Sunday. Standard subscribers can upgrade to Premium here, or explore all FT newsletters

"}],[{"start":5.15,"text":"Over the past decade Britain has had six prime ministers, eight chancellors and nine home secretaries. With the Labour Party now jostling for change, the tally could soon rise."}],[{"start":15.75,"text":"The constant churn is an indictment of leadership in the country. Few in parliament combine policy nous, real-world experience and the ability to sell a vision and convey hard truths. The talent pool of MPs has narrowed. In recent elections, the number coming from political backgrounds has risen. Meanwhile, science, technology, engineering and commercial business experience are in short supply. For measure, political analyst Sam Freedman estimates that in the 2024 cohort of Labour parliamentarians, more have worked for the charity Save the Children than in the City."}],[{"start":null,"text":"
"}],[{"start":52.35,"text":"But in a democracy, politics and policies are a reflection of the public too. "}],[{"start":57.6,"text":"First, for a nation to prosper, it must navigate trade-offs. Britons struggle with this. For example, the desire for affordable homes and electricity juts against Nimby concerns about housing projects and grid pylons. The nation’s outdated and byzantine tax code — one of the longest in the world — discourages ambition. But as reform often involves pain for vocal parts of the electorate, it doesn’t happen."}],[{"start":83.55,"text":"In general, expectations of government — in a time of crisis or otherwise — have risen. But the cutbacks needed to make fiscal space for policies is often resisted. For instance, although an ageing population piles pressure on the state, many balk at the prospect of a higher retirement age. The UK’s lavish “triple lock” — which guarantees that state pension payments rise with the highest of inflation, wage increases or 2.5 per cent — appears sacrosanct. "}],[{"start":112.94999999999999,"text":"Further, parts of the electorate think higher taxes can pay for a bigger state. But that view overlooks the deleterious impact of further raising levies on economic activity and future revenue. The country’s tax-to-GDP ratio is forecast to reach a postwar high by the end of the decade."}],[{"start":null,"text":"
"}],[{"start":130.14999999999998,"text":"Next, Britons lack patience. Raising UK productivity requires funds and political bandwidth to be shifted to “supply-side” measures to boost labour, land, capital, energy and innovation. This would raise revenues and ease the need for high tax rates to meet spending demands, while improving economic resilience. But the benefits of investing in infrastructure, skills, education and research and development accrue beyond the political cycle, while the costs are frontloaded. Hence, they receive short shrift. (Labour isn’t even halfway through its term and has had to water down its planning and welfare reform efforts.)"}],[{"start":167.39999999999998,"text":"The calibre of public discourse doesn’t help. Parts of the British media approach politics through the lens of gossip rather than policy. Debate also seems to have become dumbed down, perhaps as a function of social media. (For comparison, watch any pre-2000 episode of BBC Question Time.) Producers now farm views, prioritising binaries over nuanced discussions. This has widened the gap between voters’ economic perceptions and reality on many topics, on the left and right."}],[{"start":null,"text":"
"}],[{"start":198.54999999999998,"text":"In turn, it is little surprise Britain gets cakeist and myopic leaders, who are low on reform and high on easy answers. The slow-growing indebted economy that results ensures zero-sum politics remain salient at the ballot. As this fails to remedy the country’s ills speedily enough, few leaders end up completing their term. This environment then tends to mostly draw in MPs with political backgrounds. And the cycle repeats"}],[{"start":223.54999999999998,"text":"Right now, the frontrunners to take Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer’s job are pandering to party members (as did former prime minister Liz Truss by disastrously promising quick tax cuts to win over the Conservative base in 2022). Recent debate has centred around loosening the purse strings and rejoining the EU. Yet Britain’s long-term borrowing rates are already the highest in the G7, and the private sector has been sapped by years of Brexit and fiscal uncertainty."}],[{"start":null,"text":"
"}],[{"start":253.99999999999997,"text":"Britain isn’t the only democracy challenged by political instability and short-termism. But the threshold for overhauling UK leaders does appear to be uniquely low."}],[{"start":264.29999999999995,"text":"It’s not easy to get the public to think about trade-offs or the long term, particularly when growth is lacklustre. Experience can be a lubricant. For instance, the pain of the euro area crisis in Greece and Spain forged a wider public acceptance of the need for fiscal limits and growth reforms. Without course correction, Britain does risk learning the hard way. A better path involves a cultural shift: media and financial literacy need improving while voters could do with greater exposure beyond their bubbles. This would help the public differentiate between national and individual interests."}],[{"start":300.29999999999995,"text":"Yes, Britain lacks good leaders. But there is some truth in the notion that every democracy gets the government it deserves. "}],[{"start":308.59999999999997,"text":"Send your thoughts in the comments, to freelunch@ft.com or via X @tejparikh90. "}],[{"start":315.49999999999994,"text":"Food for thought"}],[{"start":317.3999999999999,"text":"As more countries seek to emulate Australia’s move to ban under-16s from social media, this research outlines why such measures tend to fail."}],[{"start":null,"text":"
"}],[{"start":326.19999999999993,"text":"Free Lunch on Sunday is edited by Harvey Nriapia"}],[{"start":null,"text":"

Recommended newsletters for you

The AI Shift — John Burn-Murdoch and Sarah O’Connor dive into how AI is transforming the world of work. Sign up here

Unhedged — Robert Armstrong dissects the most important market trends and discusses how Wall Street’s best minds respond to them. Sign up here

"}],[{"start":335.2499999999999,"text":""}]],"url":"https://audio.ftcn.net.cn/album/a_1779074891_3053.mp3"}
版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

现代战争的血腥一如往昔

科技的进步并没有减少俄乌战争中的伤亡,武装无人机和AI正把前线变成险恶的杀戮地带,惨烈程度堪比一战。

帕拉贝利斯医药公司于与再生元达成交易次日披露IPO计划,上市热潮升温

成立已有十年且资金雄厚、从格雷格•维尔丁在哈佛实验室孵化出的“不可成药”生物技术公司——帕拉贝利斯医药公司,正寻求成为今年第12家进行首次公开募股的药物研发企业
16小时前

英伟达部署900亿美元助推AI繁荣

黄仁勋正成为依赖其芯片的AI相关公司的最大资助者之一。这些支出涉及逾145家公司,从AI模型开发商、云服务提供商到基础设施供应商不一而足。

Lex专栏:股市投资者信心爆棚,但现金见底

鉴于标普500指数高度依赖以人工智能为驱动的公司,股市出现小问题和大问题的可能性都很大。

FT社评:埃博拉疫情暴露全球应对大流行病准备不足

援助资金减少以及特朗普政府对全球公共卫生理念的敌意,正危及我们所有人。

“四大”急聘AI专业人才,岗位数量盖过传统审计师

全球最大的几家会计师事务所正竞相适应颠覆性的技术变革。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×