The Post-Pandemic State
Analysis
BBC
4.6 • 1K Ratings
🗓️ 29 June 2020
⏱️ 29 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
Government intervention on an unprecedented scale has propped up the British economy - and society at large - during the pandemic. But what should be the state's role from now on? Can Conservatives successfully embrace an enduring central role for government in the economy given their small-state, Thatcherite heritage championing the role of the individual, lower spending and lower taxes? And can Labour, instinctively keener on a more active state, discipline its impulses towards more generous government so that they don't end up thwarting its ambitions for greater equality and fairness?
Four eminent political thinkers join Edward Stourton to debate the lessons of political pivot points in Britain's postwar history and how these should guide us in deciding what the borders of the state should be in the post-pandemic world - and who's going to pay.
Those taking part: Andrew Harrop of the Fabian Society, who draws inspiration from Labour's 1945 landslide victory to advocate a highly active and determined state to promote opportunity, fairness and equality; former Conservative minister David Willetts of the Resolution Foundation, who sees the lessons of the Conservative revolution in 1979 as relevant as ever about the limits of the state but also argues core Conservative beliefs are consistent with bigger government; former Blairite thinker, Geoff Mulgan, who, drawing on the lessons of 1997, resists notions of a catch-all politics in the face of the multi-faceted demands on today's state; and Dean Godson of Policy Exchange, influential with the Conservative modernisers of the Cameron era, who insists a Thatcherite view of the state shouldn't rigidly define how the centre-right responds to our new circumstances.
Producer Simon Coates Editor Jasper Corbett
Transcript
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| 0:41.0 | Hello and thanks for listening to Analysis. podcasts. would Sturton will be exploring how the pandemic is forcing political thinkers of left and right in Britain |
| 0:56.2 | to re-evaluate the role of the state. |
| 0:59.4 | Big government has seen Britain through COVID-19 up to this point. But now what? What should the state do and for how long? And what about the answer to the all-important question of who should pay? Find out now in the post-pandemic state. |
| 1:17.0 | Newspapers carried the astonishing news to an amazed public, for let's face it, whoever imagined such a result, |
| 1:25.9 | and slowly the model of it all struck home, Labour Landslie. |
| 1:31.8 | Labour's victory in 1945 seemed to run against the tide of history. |
| 1:37.0 | Winston Churchill, who only weeks earlier had bashed in the adoration of the crowds flooding |
| 1:41.6 | the streets to celebrate victory in Europe was, as British |
| 1:45.7 | Pathay reported, turfed out of Downing Street, to be replaced by the taciturn and unassuming |
| 1:51.4 | Clement Attley. |
| 1:52.4 | The Labour Party's great victory. acetone and unassuming Clementatley. |
| 1:52.8 | The Labour Party's great victory shows that the country is ready for a new policy to face |
| 2:01.2 | new world conditions that it believes that labour has the right policy and also |
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