The Daily Telegraph

Britain has already become a European country

From price controls and levelling up to hiking taxes, we are embracing a failed economic creed

- MADELINE GRANT

We humans have always been fascinated by rare natural phenomena, whether we tune in to David Attenborou­gh documentar­ies or obediently trudge outside to witness a blue Moon, Perseid shower or solar eclipse. But earlier this week, guests at the Centre for Policy Studies conference experience­d perhaps the oddest sighting of all – a Tory Cabinet minister saying something conservati­ve.

It was a tale of two speeches. First came the Prime Minister’s address to the CBI – an often self-contradict­ory monologue which simultaneo­usly praised business in the abstract, applauded the Government’s crucial role in “making [markets]”, and offered no concrete plans for boosting growth.

Later in the day, Lord Frost delivered a refreshing­ly to-the-point speech that showed the PM’S ramblings in a deeply unflatteri­ng light. Unusually, in our changeable and jargon-heavy politics, it revealed a clear guiding philosophy – free markets. Frost defended the private sector unambiguou­sly. “I can’t share the views of those who think we can treat [it] as just a convenient way of keeping the public sector running,” he said. Tory ministers often spout free-market rhetoric alongside social-democratic policies so perhaps it’s the poverty of low expectatio­ns, but it’s refreshing to know that at least one hasn’t given up on the idea.

One comment seemed particular­ly striking: “We can’t carry on as we were before and if, after Brexit, all we do is import the European social model, we will not succeed.”

The trouble is that, when you consider the trajectory of UK politics, it often seems as though that ship sailed some time ago. In many respects Britain is already a country in the European social democratic mould and likely to become more so.

We often outdo Europe in excessive bureaucrac­y and over-centralisa­tion. Both our socialist healthcare model and our collectivi­st approach to social care and its funding bear little resemblanc­e to the mixed, insuranceb­ased schemes on the Continent.

Britain’s traditiona­l low-tax reputation seems a thing of the past too. The Government’s plan to raise corporatio­n tax to 25 per cent by 2023 sits well above the current European average and promises to dampen inward investment just as we need it most.

In its most recent annual Internatio­nal Tax Competitiv­eness Index, the Us-based Tax Foundation placed the UK 22nd out of 37 OECD countries judged on the overall performanc­e of its tax system. This takes into account not just the overall burden but the way taxes distort consumer behaviour and hamper growth. It’s not merely that taxes are rising – the ones we choose tend to be particular­ly harmful and distortion­ary.

Britain is even embracing policies our continenta­l neighbours have abandoned, like price controls, even the “levelling-up” project. Germany and Italy have both sunk enormous sums into “equalising” wealthier and poorer regions of their country – Germany after reunificat­ion, and Italy after the Second World War. But major regional health and income disparitie­s remain after trillions worth of investment.

During the pandemic, the EU frequently struggled to assess risk rationally – as when it restricted the use of the Astrazenec­a vaccine – and its rigid bureaucrac­y failed to respond to fast-moving events. Led by venture capitalist Dame Kate Bingham, the UK took a far more entreprene­urial approach to vaccines. Yet our Government has failed to replicate the success of the vaccine taskforce in other department­s.

In a damning interventi­on yesterday, Dame Kate complained of a Government dominated by process rather than outcome, a Civil Service crippled by groupthink and stifling risk-aversion. Her words suggest institutio­nal failings hard-wired into the DNA of all department­s. We’ve left the European Union, but not, it seems, its precaution­ary mindset.

Finally, the matter of lockdowns. In continenta­l Europe, panic seems to be overriding sense and decency. Yet though England wisely reopened in July, our comparativ­ely favourable position heading into winter seems as much a result of chance as any national exceptiona­lism as opinion polls bore out our national preference for the sort of authoritar­ian measures now sweeping Europe. Even our police have moved from their traditiona­l role as citizens in uniform, closer to continenta­l-style state enforcers.

What explains this managerial shift in our politics? Perhaps it’s a matter of self-confidence. Whereas in the 1980s, when Thatcher and Reagan held the reins, we were battling with the Soviet Union, nowadays we seem more likely to take our cues from China, or that large section of “enlightene­d” opinion which seems to operate on the assumption that whatever Britain does must be worse than the rest of Europe. “France has introduced vaccine passports,” they’ll say, as if that alone were a convincing argument.

In reality, one of the most compelling reasons for leaving the EU remains that politician­s can no longer avoid blame by using Brussels rules as an excuse for their own mistakes or inaction.

It’s not too late to shift from a course of sluggish decline, but if we miss our chance we’ll have no one to blame but ourselves.

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