1. The Country That Works For You
You have worked for this country. Now this country must work for you.
You have worked for this country. Now this country must work for you.
This series is a practical blueprint for how to make that happen. One connected programme, with each part grounded in dates, numbers, delivery choices, and trade-offs. No slogans. No magical thinking. Just a plan that can be done.
What This Programme Asks of You
This programme is about government, but it is not only about government.
It asks you to stop treating politics as spectator sport. Read the argument, test it against your own life, and organise where you are, in your street, your workplace, your council ward, your union branch, your parent group, your tenants' group. If enough people do that, policy survives contact with power.
It also asks for discipline. Not permanent outrage. Not doom-scrolling. Discipline. The far right sells belonging in a poison package. A serious democratic programme has to offer belonging, agency, and purpose in a healthy one. That is achievable, if enough people decide to build instead of just react.
The companion piece, What Could Be Enabled: A Civic Programme, sets out the community side, rights to grow on council land, local food networks, neighbourhood infrastructure, and practical collective action. Read it alongside this series.
The Central Argument
The UK is not broken because of bad luck. What Britain has been experiencing is managed decline: a deliberate set of choices that has hollowed out the country's capability while protecting those already at the top.
You can see it in the timeline. Real wages have broadly stagnated since 2008. NHS waiting lists are at record levels in the 2020s. Housing costs have risen faster than earnings for years. Public systems are asked to deliver first-rate outcomes with third-rate investment, then blamed when they fail.
None of this is inevitable. It is the product of poor policy choices, reinforced by the way the wealthiest interests have steered politics and media to defend their position. That is how we got here. Britain has solved this kind of crisis before: after the Second World War, the country rebuilt itself at scale through deliberate political choices. That was a choice too. Choices can be unmade and remade.
That is what this series does: here is the failure mode, here is the mechanism, here is the cost of fixing it, here is how to pay for it, here is what to build first.
The Three Things That Must Change
Every chapter has specific policy. Underneath, there are three structural changes.
First: rebalance the economy from extraction to production.
Too much capital in Britain is rewarded for owning existing assets, not building new capacity. Housing became a tax-advantaged wealth machine when it should have stayed, primarily, a place to live. Finance expanded, while productive investment lagged. The result is low growth, high rents, brittle supply chains, and permanent political bitterness.
This programme reverses the incentives: reward building, training, engineering, care, and long-term investment, not passive extraction.
Second: restore bargaining power to working people.
When wages are weak for 15 years, from 2008 to 2023 and beyond, people are told to call it globalisation, technology, or unfortunate weather. It is mostly power. Union density, labour market rules, outsourcing models, and enforcement choices all matter.
This programme is explicit: stronger worker institutions, better standards, better enforcement, and a larger share of national income going to people who work for it.
Third: rebuild state capability so policy can actually land.
A state can only regulate what it can see and enforce. It can only tax what it can measure. It can only build what it can plan and procure. Britain has spent years pretending capacity does not matter, then acting surprised when delivery collapses.
This programme rebuilds capability on purpose: better institutions, better data, better procurement, clearer missions, and rules designed for delivery, not for permanent stalemate.
That is the direction of travel. Not just away from failure, toward a country that can still do difficult things well.
What It Costs
A programme of this scale costs money. The honest range is GBP 57.8 to 71 billion per year.
Context matters.
- The UK borrowed around GBP 100 billion or more per year through much of the 2010s, while claiming austerity was fiscal responsibility.
- COVID borrowing peaked at roughly 15% of GDP.
- This programme is about 2% of GDP when fully implemented.
Revenue comes from those most able to pay: progressive tax reform, a redesigned energy windfall framework, inheritance tax reform, and serious anti-avoidance enforcement. That raises around GBP 20 to 35 billion per year in recurring revenue, with a one-off extreme wealth levy in year one raising roughly GBP 5 to 15 billion.
The balance, around GBP 25 to 50 billion, is borrowing for investment, not day-to-day consumption.
Britain borrows in its own currency. The hard constraint is not arithmetic. It is whether ministers choose to build.
The 1930s Parallel, Properly Understood
The 1930s were not inevitable history happening to everyone at random. They were political choices, made in sequence, by identifiable people, with measurable consequences.
Policy locked into deflation. Social fracture deepened. Institutions hesitated, delayed, and rationalised. Then events outran them.
Today is not the 1930s. We are not in that world. But the mechanism is familiar: elite drift, institutional timidity, and a refusal to act at the scale reality requires.
We already know some of the timelines. Food pressure is likely to intensify into 2027. NHS strain does not pause while Westminster has another argument about process. Climate and infrastructure risks compound while headlines rotate.
The point of the historical parallel is simple: decline is a policy choice, repeated. Recovery is also a policy choice, repeated.
Series Index
If you want the short version, here it is: this is hard, it is affordable, and it is buildable.
Read the next part in the series. Then decide what you are willing to help build.
This site does not offer financial advice. It offers analysis.
You have worked for this country. Now this country must work for you.