The Daily Telegraph

A populist triumph that does not understand ordinary people at all

- By Robert Dingwall

All infectious disease outbreaks generate three social epidemics – of fear, explanatio­n and action. The last describes the pressure to “do something”, however pointless or irrelevant.

The Government’s latest package represents another triumph of populism over science. Its approach is reminiscen­t of the line from Bertolt Brecht, the Communist playwright, about the failure of the people to live up to the politician­s’ expectatio­ns – so the people must be dissolved. The people are portrayed as selfish, needing to be hectored, bullied and discipline­d rather than engaged.

Most people have not behaved badly so far: simply in ways that are individual­ly rational but have collective­ly irrational consequenc­es. They are told to prepare to self-isolate for up to 14 days – so they transfer stocks from supermarke­ts to their homes, if they can afford to do so.

When this happens, it exposes the fragility of just-in-time supply chains.

People were told they could go out as long as they kept 2m apart. They looked at a sunny weekend and decided that going out was better than staring at four walls. Self-isolation rapidly damages mental and physical health: this is why we prefer not to place prisoners in solitary

Self-isolation is quite different for politician­s and policy elites living in big houses with gardens

confinemen­t. When people got to the park or the beach, they found that a lot of others happened to have had the same idea… They had all acted independen­tly rather than selfishly.

There are some very smart biomedical scientists and mathematic­ians advising No10. I respect them greatly in their areas of expertise, but they are not experts in the sciences of society. These policies show how deeply they remain attached to the notion that ordinary people are ignorant and irrational, rather than operating with different values and logics. Only if we understand these, which is the business of the social sciences, can we reconcile science-based policy with the everyday lives of so many people.

Self-isolation is quite different for politician­s and policy elites living in big houses with gardens and people in temporary accommodat­ion, high-rise blocks or 8 x 4 bedrooms in shared city housing. Policies must leave room for flexibilit­y, interpreta­tion and personalis­ed risk assessment­s. They should focus on ends rather than means – and offer positive and constructi­ve options. Benjamin Disraeli, a great Tory prime minister, understood the divisions in his country. Unfortunat­ely, the current Prime Minister’s hero is Winston Churchill.

Robert Dingwall is the professor of sociology at Nottingham Trent University

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom