Posts Tagged freedom
Freedom. Fairness. Responsibility. And the NHS.
Posted by James Gubb in Health on 20/05/2010
Freedom. Fairness. Responsibility. The sounding words of the coalition document, released today. But do these words (most particularly the last one) not, then, require at least a mention in the section on the NHS of the scale of the productivity challenge facing the health service… and perhaps a few ideas of what to do about it?
Elite British-style schools open to all – but only in Sweden
Posted by James Gubb in Education on 16/06/2008
Schools in the state sector in Sweden can offer the acclaimed International GCSE (IGCSE) science qualifications that have been denied to British state school pupils by the government, according to Swedish Lessons, a report published today by independent think-tank Civitas.
What is really happening to freedom
Posted by James Gubb in Civil Liberty on 26/03/2007
With great fanfare the BBC has launched a prime time documentary called The Trap – What Happened to our Dream of Freedom. It is the usual bravely radical, groundbreaking BBC stuff of course. In other words it is full of soft left clichés recycled from the heyday of collectivism, writes Graham Cunningham.
I was reminded of that 1960’s folk music ditty Little Boxes, popularised by Pete Seeger. Older readers may remember it. Here are a few snatches from memory:
And the people on the box
All went to the university,
Where they ticked all the trendy boxes
And they came out all the same,
And there’s teachers and film directors,
And tv executives,
And they’re all full of radical-chic tacky
And they all think just the same.
OK I confess. I might have changed the words a bit!
An affluence for good
Posted by James Gubb in Civil Liberty, Tax and Spend on 14/03/2007
Before long, many of us will be sitting on Adam Smith. The Bank of England has just launched a new £20 note bearing an image of the Scottish philosopher and inventor of economics, writes Dr Peter Heslam.
It isn’t clear whether the Chancellor, Gordon Brown, had anything to do with the decision. He is a Smith enthusiast who is proud to share his birthplace of Kirkcaldy. In any event, it is a remarkable choice, given the way Smith’s ideas are often associated with precisely what is wrong with the global economy today: its relentless, unethical pursuit of the free market, to the detriment of humanity.
Perhaps if the truth were known we wouldn’t be so surprised. After all, Smith argued that the economy could function in the interests of all only if it was held in check, both by the state and by morality. In fact, he insisted that it could not thrive apart from a culture steeped in virtue.
He was also the first serious thinker to suggest that there was a solution to global poverty. It was not charity, philanthropy, state power or any other top-down or paternalist strategy; it was the freedom of the individual to pursue their own economic self-interest. Only this directed as it was by the invisible hand of Providence had the capacity to unleash the human creativity necessary for economic prosperity.
Smith went further. The very aim of human society, he said, should be universal affluence through the creation of wealth. This would put the economy at the service of human beings, rather than vice versa, liberating people from the prison of poverty and scarcity that was the inevitable consequence of the subsistence model that had dominated human history.
It was not the Make Poverty History campaign of 2005, therefore, that first inspired the public to think that something could be done about global poverty. It was Smith’s book The Wealth of Nations, published in 1776 a time when, even in the West, most people were poor.
Smith’s own hand in economic affairs may now be invisible, but if we are to address contemporary global poverty, the ideas he articulated are worth revisiting. The new £20 in our pockets will be a reminder to do so. In this way, it may exert a greater influence for the good of humankind than through its purchasing power alone.
Dr Peter Heslam is director of Transforming Business at Cambridge University (www.transformingbusiness.net)
