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How to win a trade war

With Donald Trump back in the White House, tariffs have become front-page news, and advocates for free trade find themselves on the back foot. Is this a passing phase, or a permanent shift? Soumaya Keynes and Chad Bown argue that with great powers now using trade as a weapon, there can be no simple return […]

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Podcast

The industrial policy illusion

From the progressive left to the nationalist right – in Washington or Westminster – a new consensus is forming. It argues that government should play a larger role in the economy, and that using industrial policy to achieve the economic outcomes we want is just common sense As president of the American Institute for Economic […]

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Podcast

Why so many prime ministers?

Britain is paying more to borrow than any other major Western economy. So why is Labour preoccupied with internal power struggles? In a special live address, Shadow Chancellor Mel Stride delivers his account of Britain’s fiscal predicament and the Conservative Party’s plan to fix it. Our borrowing costs are the highest in the G7, higher […]

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Podcast

The economy always wins

Keir Starmer is fighting for his political life. The bond markets are watching — and they have a long memory. Kallum Pickering, chief economist at Peel Hunt and columnist for The Telegraph, joins CapX editor Marc Sidwell for a lucid diagnosis of what is really going wrong with the British economy, why the markets are […]

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Podcast

What happened to our money?

When a business raises capital, it buys equipment, expands its operations, and hires people. That’s how investment becomes jobs. But the United Kingdom has ranked in the bottom quartile of advanced economies for private capital investment every year since 1995. The gap with our peers runs to roughly £100 billion annually. A new report from […]

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Podcast

You’ll need ID to be online soon

The UK government is giving tech companies three months to activate on-device content scanning and age verification across all smartphones and tablets sold in Britain – or face fines and potentially criminal liability. Framed as a child safety measure, the proposal has drawn fierce criticism from privacy advocates, civil liberties groups, and free speech lawyers […]

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Podcast

How to win a trade war

With Donald Trump back in the White House, tariffs have become front-page news, and advocates for free trade find themselves on the back foot. Is this a passing phase, or a permanent shift? Soumaya Keynes and Chad Bown argue that with great powers now using trade as a weapon, there can be no simple return […]

podcast thumbnail
Podcast

The industrial policy illusion

From the progressive left to the nationalist right – in Washington or Westminster – a new consensus is forming. It argues that government should play a larger role in the economy, and that using industrial policy to achieve the economic outcomes we want is just common sense As president of the American Institute for Economic […]

podcast thumbnail
Podcast

Why so many prime ministers?

Britain is paying more to borrow than any other major Western economy. So why is Labour preoccupied with internal power struggles? In a special live address, Shadow Chancellor Mel Stride delivers his account of Britain’s fiscal predicament and the Conservative Party’s plan to fix it. Our borrowing costs are the highest in the G7, higher […]

podcast thumbnail
Podcast

The economy always wins

Keir Starmer is fighting for his political life. The bond markets are watching — and they have a long memory. Kallum Pickering, chief economist at Peel Hunt and columnist for The Telegraph, joins CapX editor Marc Sidwell for a lucid diagnosis of what is really going wrong with the British economy, why the markets are […]

podcast thumbnail
Podcast

What happened to our money?

When a business raises capital, it buys equipment, expands its operations, and hires people. That’s how investment becomes jobs. But the United Kingdom has ranked in the bottom quartile of advanced economies for private capital investment every year since 1995. The gap with our peers runs to roughly £100 billion annually. A new report from […]

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Podcast

It’s a race Britain can win

Britain may have stumbled almost accidentally into one of the best positions in the world to win the AI race. The question is whether it has the wit and will to press the advantage. Recorded live at the Margaret Thatcher Conference in London, Charlotte Crosswell OBE chairs a conversation with Louis Mosley, Executive Vice Chair […]

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Podcast

Winning the feminist argument

The feminist case for capitalism is one of the most powerful arguments nobody seems to be making. Zoe Strimpel has decided to make it anyway. A columnist for The Telegraph and author of Good Slut: How Money, Sex and Power Set Women Free, Zoe joins CapX editor Marc Sidwell to make the conservative case for […]

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Podcast

How the world sees the UK

Britain’s reputation for decline has taken on a life of its own online. But how much of it is real — and what would it actually take to fix? Sam Dumitriu, head of policy at Britain Remade, joins CapX editor Marc Sidwell for a forensic tour through the structural problems dragging on the British economy […]

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Podcast

Is liberal democracy failing?

Liberalism is under its greatest threat since the 1930s. The question is whether its defenders have the nerve to admit why – and the ideas to fight back. Adrian Wooldridge, Bloomberg columnist and author of “Centrists of the World Unite!”, joins CapX editor Marc Sidwell for an unsentimental diagnosis of liberalism’s crisis — and an […]

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Podcast

Is politics broken for good?

The political map we grew up with is obsolete. What comes next could be far more turbulent than anything we’ve seen so far. Historian Stephen Davies, author of The Great Realignment, joins CapX editor Marc Sidwell to make the case that the upheavals of recent years – Brexit, Trump, the rise of Reform – are […]

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Podcast

Here’s how the Tories win

The Conservative Party has a plan to rebuild. But is it radical enough — and does it have the courage to see it through? James Cowling, founder of Next Gen Tories, joins CapX editor Marc Sidwell to make the case that the Conservative Party’s problems run deeper than a bad election result — and that […]

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Podcast

We need energy security

When war in Iran doubled gas prices overnight, Britain’s energy vulnerabilities were suddenly impossible to ignore. But what’s the real fix — and who’s actually right? Tim Leunig, former economic adviser to Rishi Sunak and chief economist at Nesta, joins CapX editor Marc Sidwell for a clear-eyed tour through Britain’s energy predicament. He makes the […]

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Podcast

Pierre Poilievre on free markets

Why does it feel harder than ever for young people to buy a home? According to Pierre Poilievre, the answer lies not just in planning laws or slow construction — but in the silent erosion of money itself. In this special episode of The Capitalist, recorded at the Margaret Thatcher Lecture hosted by the Centre […]

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Podcast

Building things can make us richer

Britain is in the grip of a housing crisis. And despite the promises of successive governments, we just can’t seem to build enough new homes. But this isn’t a uniquely British problem. In his book, “Build Baby Build”, Bryan Caplan examines the forces shaping housing markets in a way that applies almost everywhere. Bryan’s core […]

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