The optimistic case โ and what we could actually do about it
It's easy to list everything that's wrong. This page is the harder thing: a serious, evidence-backed look at what Britain does well, what could work better, and the specific proposals from people who've actually thought about it. Not blind optimism โ practical optimism.
Before talking about what needs fixing, it's worth being clear about what's genuinely strong. Britain has structural advantages that most countries would envy.
The UK remains one of the biggest and most diversified economies on the planet. Services, finance, tech, creative industries, life sciences โ deep strengths across sectors.
The global language of business, bridging US and Asian markets in a single working day. A structural advantage that doesn't go away.
4 of the world's top 20. The UK produces more AI startups per capita than anywhere in Europe. The talent pipeline is real.
Independent judiciary, enforceable contracts, stable democracy, free press. Boring things that businesses actually care about.
Still one of the world's 2-3 truly global cities. Finance, arts, tech, food, culture โ a gravitational pull for talent and capital.
DeepMind, ARM, Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine, the Francis Crick Institute. The UK punches far above its weight in R&D.
"Britain is not a failing state. It's a country with extraordinary assets making avoidable mistakes. The gap between where we are and where we could be is policy โ not destiny."
Dan Neidle founded Tax Policy Associates after a 25-year career as a tax lawyer at Clifford Chance. He's a left-of-centre tax policy wonk who shares some of Gary Stevenson's concerns about inequality โ but his proposals are specific, costed, and grounded in what's worked elsewhere. He's also been publicly critical of Gary's wealth tax pitch.
Council tax is based on 1991 property values and is deeply regressive โ someone in a ยฃ200k Band A flat pays a higher effective rate than someone in a ยฃ2m Band H house. Stamp duty gums up the housing market, discouraging downsizing and labour mobility. Replace both with a simple annual tax based on current property value โ around 0.5% for most homes โ and you raise the same revenue more fairly while freeing up the housing market.
Business rates punish investment โ improve your premises and your rates go up. A land value tax (LVT) taxes the unimproved value of the land, not what you build on it. It's economically efficient (you can't hide land or move it offshore), encourages development of underused sites, and shifts the burden from productive investment to passive land ownership.
The UK tax code is over 10 million words โ the longest in the world. Every relief, allowance and exemption was lobbied for by someone. Strip them out, broaden the base, and you can lower headline rates while raising the same revenue. More transparent, harder to game, cheaper to administer.
Rather than creating a new wealth tax with all its valuation and avoidance problems, close the carried interest loophole, align CGT rates with income tax, and end the absurd situation where private equity managers pay less tax than their cleaners. These are fixable with existing machinery.
Daniel Priestley is a serial entrepreneur who's built and sold multiple businesses. He's the author of Key Person of Influence and Oversubscribed, and he runs Dent Global, a business accelerator. His critique of Gary Stevenson on Diary of a CEO went viral (58K+ views) because he offered a fundamentally different diagnosis: Britain's problem isn't too many rich people โ it's not enough of them.
Priestley's core argument: the UK should aim to create 10,000 new entrepreneurs worth ยฃ10m+ rather than trying to squeeze the existing wealthy. Each successful entrepreneur creates jobs, pays taxes, and builds the kind of businesses that make an economy resilient. Norway lost 30+ billionaires after raising its wealth tax โ the UK should learn from that.
Priestley's "Scorecard" system measures business value across five dimensions: IP, brand, systems, relationships, and cashflow. The idea is that most small business owners don't think like asset-builders. Teach people to build valuable, sellable businesses โ not just self-employment โ and you change the economic trajectory.
Britain already produces extraordinary entrepreneurs โ James Dyson, Richard Branson, the Revolut founders. The question is whether we keep them. Priestley argues that an entrepreneurial culture celebrates success rather than resenting it, and that the policy environment should make staying attractive.
Beyond Neidle and Priestley, there's a rich landscape of practical, evidence-backed proposals from across the political spectrum.
Britain's housing crisis is at the root of many economic problems: high rents drain disposable income, high prices block labour mobility, and restrictive planning laws benefit existing homeowners at everyone else's expense. Build 300,000+ homes a year, especially in high-productivity cities, and the growth dividend is enormous.
The UK underinvests in infrastructure relative to peers. Better rail links between northern cities, upgraded electricity grid for renewables, full-fibre broadband everywhere. These aren't exciting, but the ROI is solid โ and they spread economic activity beyond London and the South East.
It's almost impossible to build anything in Britain without years of planning battles. Streamlining the system โ while keeping environmental protections โ would unlock housing, clean energy, labs, factories, and transport. The economic gains from planning reform alone are estimated in the tens of billions.
The current system lets the very wealthy avoid inheritance tax through trusts, agricultural relief and business relief, while families with modest estates get caught. A lower-rate, broader-base system with fewer loopholes would be fairer and could raise the same revenue โ or more.
The UK is one of the most centralised countries in the developed world. Give cities and regions real fiscal powers โ let Manchester, Birmingham, Glasgow set their own business rates, keep more of their tax revenue, and invest locally. Countries that devolve grow faster and more evenly.
The apprenticeship levy has been poorly implemented, but the idea is right. Germany, Switzerland and the Netherlands all have strong vocational pathways that don't require a university degree. The UK should build a genuine technical education system with employer involvement โ not as a second-class option, but as a parallel path to prosperity.
This isn't a fantasy. It's a synthesis of proposals that have been costed, tested internationally, and recommended by people who know what they're talking about.
The point isn't that any one of these is a silver bullet. It's that there's a coherent set of things Britain could do โ things that work elsewhere, things that have been carefully designed, things that don't require revolutionary politics โ that would make the country fairer, richer, and more dynamic.
Gary Stevenson's diagnosis has some truth in it: Britain is too unequal, the tax system is broken, and too many people feel the economy doesn't work for them. But the prescription doesn't follow from the diagnosis. The countries that fixed these problems didn't do it with wealth taxes โ they did it with practical reforms to property taxation, planning, skills, and entrepreneurship.
Britain's best days don't have to be behind it. The assets are real. The ideas are out there. What's missing is the political will โ and perhaps the belief that it's possible.
"The UK has enormous untapped potential. We have world-class universities, a global language, the rule of law, and deep capital markets. The question isn't whether Britain can succeed โ it's whether we'll stop getting in our own way."
This page draws on work from across the political spectrum. These are the sources.
Dan Neidle / Tax Policy Associates
taxpolicy.org.uk โ Independent tax policy analysis. Council tax reform, LVT, wealth tax critique, CGT reform.
Daniel Priestley / Dent Global
Diary of a CEO โ debate with Gary Stevenson (58K views)
Key Person of Influence (book) ยท Oversubscribed (book) ยท Dent Global accelerator
Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS)
ifs.org.uk โ UK's leading independent economic research institute. Tax reviews, inequality analysis, policy evaluation.
Resolution Foundation
resolutionfoundation.org โ Living standards, inequality, tax and benefit reform.
Centre for Cities
centreforcities.org โ Urban economics, devolution, planning reform, transport.
Adam Smith Institute
adamsmith.org โ Free-market policy proposals, planning reform, tax simplification.
Sam Bowman
Writer and policy analyst on housing, planning, and economic growth. Regular contributor to The Critic, Works in Progress, and various think tanks.