The Vital Center

Why Britain (and the US?) face a governance crisis, with Sam Freedman


Listen Later

The 2024 U.S. election was to a large extent driven by voter frustrations with what seems to many to be a sluggish economy and dysfunctional government that no longer delivers for its citizens as it used to. But similar frustrations are felt in developed countries all around the world, and perhaps nowhere more acutely than in Great Britain. Its economy has stagnated for fifteen years, with the lowest rates of productivity registered over such a span since the beginning of the Industrial Revolution. Child poverty levels have risen to record levels, prisons are dangerously overcrowded, sewage spills increasingly pollute the country’s lakes and rivers, rail service is increasingly chaotic, and dissatisfaction with almost all public services is rife. Even Rishi Sunak, the former Conservative prime minister, complained while in office that “Politics doesn’t work the way it should. … [O]ur political system is too focused on short-term advantage, not long-term success. Politicians spend more time campaigning for change than actually delivering it.”

Sam Freedman, who writes the UK’s leading politics Substack with his father Lawrence, has a new book with the blunt title Failed State: Why Nothing Works and How We Fix It. Unusually for books of this type, his analysis spends little time on individual politicians or ideologies and looks at the underlying systemic factors responsible for Britain’s crisis. He draws inspiration from W. Edward Deming’s famous observation that “A bad system will beat a good person every time” and points to key critical changes over the past half-century that have made it nearly impossible even for competent, governing-minded prime ministers to do their jobs effectively. 

A critical factor in this governance crisis has been the UK’s drive toward excessive centralization, which has led the government to attempt to do too much while working through institutions that lack the capacity to handle increasingly complex problems. In an attempt to compensate for this lack of capacity, the government increasingly has relied upon outsourcing what once were public services to a handful of powerful private companies, which continue to reap massive public contracts despite scandalous failures. Worse still, these developments have taken place against a backdrop of an accelerating media cycle. Decisions have to be taken faster and under greater pressure, which gives politicians destructive incentives and increasingly leads them to make disastrous decisions, which they then attempt to excuse away through public-relations spin.

In this podcast episode, Sam Freedman discusses how Britain’s combination of hypercentralization, executive dominance of an overly large and complex state, and a superfast media cycle have combined to produce toxic politics and something like national paralysis. He concludes that this governance crisis will end as other crises have before it: “Eventually the challenges of a given era get so bad that a dam breaks and a way of doing things that has become accepted as inevitable or too hard to change gets washed away.”

...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

The Vital CenterBy The Niskanen Center

  • 4.9
  • 4.9
  • 4.9
  • 4.9
  • 4.9

4.9

41 ratings


More shows like The Vital Center

View all
Left, Right & Center by KCRW

Left, Right & Center

5,020 Listeners

Conversations with Bill Kristol by Bill Kristol

Conversations with Bill Kristol

1,891 Listeners

The Gray Area with Sean Illing by Vox

The Gray Area with Sean Illing

10,637 Listeners

Radio Atlantic by The Atlantic

Radio Atlantic

2,270 Listeners

Interesting Times with Ross Douthat by New York Times Opinion

Interesting Times with Ross Douthat

6,598 Listeners

Know Your Enemy by Matthew Sitman

Know Your Enemy

1,904 Listeners

The American Compass Podcast by American Compass

The American Compass Podcast

53 Listeners

Hard Fork by The New York Times

Hard Fork

5,353 Listeners

The Ezra Klein Show by New York Times Opinion

The Ezra Klein Show

15,251 Listeners

Plain English with Derek Thompson by The Ringer

Plain English with Derek Thompson

2,126 Listeners

Statecraft by Santi Ruiz

Statecraft

41 Listeners

Politix by Politix

Politix

98 Listeners

Good on Paper by The Atlantic

Good on Paper

350 Listeners

The Opinions by The New York Times Opinion

The Opinions

369 Listeners

How to Fix It with John Avlon by The Bulwark

How to Fix It with John Avlon

88 Listeners