Leaders | Labour’s growth plan

Is the big state back in Britain?

The risk is not too much interventionism, but too little audacity

Illustration of a hand holding a large one penny coin inbetween its thumb and forefinger, on a red background.
Illustration: Nate Kitch

The Labour Party’s first month in power has given scaremongers plenty to work with. Britain’s new government has begun to unveil what looks to be the most interventionist economic agenda the country has seen in the past 50 years. Railways are to be re-nationalised. An activist state is spending billions on industrial policy and setting up a new energy behemoth. Teachers and doctors will receive big pay increases. A workers’ rights agenda is to come—as are, almost certainly, increases in taxes on capital gains.

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From the August 3rd 2024 edition

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