Sam Bidwell Profile picture
Jan 13 25 tweets 10 min read Read on X
Britain has some of the best human capital in the world - and some of the worst government policy 🇬🇧

We mustn't lose sight of this fact. There is so much to celebrate about our country.

A 🧵 with some reasons to be bullish on Britain - if we can just get the basics right Image
Let's start with London.

The capital ranks alongside New York as one of the world's truly 'global cities'.

The City of London in particular is a financial powerhouse. 38% of global foreign exchange transactions take place in London - more than any other city in the world. Image
The City generates over £97 billion in economic output annually - and the UK as a whole exports over £175 billion p/a in financial and professional services.

London sits in second place, behind New York, on the Global Financial Centres Index - and the UK is the second-largest services exporter globally.Image
London is such a financial services powerhouse that our secondary services hub, Canary Wharf, produces more annual output in this sector than European hubs like Frankfurt.

London is also the world's leading arbitration hub - 85% of maritime contract disputes are settled here. Image
With 83.8 million total passengers in 2024, London's Heathrow Airport is the fourth busiest in the world, and the busiest in Europe.

This is a huge infrastructural advantage - Heathrow's connectivity makes it easy for business travellers from around the world to visit London. Image
London's other airports contribute a further 90 million passenger journeys.

Gatwick is Europe's 8th busiest airport, with more annual passengers than Rome or Munich.

Stansted is Europe's 20th busiest airport, with more annual passengers than Copenhagen, Oslo, and Berlin. Image
The UK also has some of the world's best universities.

The Times World University Rankings puts three British universities - Cambridge, Oxford, and Imperial College London - in the top 10 globally.

The UK and the US are the only countries with universities in the top 10. Image
High quality research institutions like these help to make the UK one of the most innovative economies in the world, pound for pound.

The UK consistently features in the top 5 of the WIPO Global Innovation Index, and in the top 10 of the BCG International Innovation Index. Image
When it comes to VC funding, London ranks 4th in the world - the nearest European equivalent is Paris, in 11th.

The UK is 7th in the world for VC funding ($207 per head), with more than double the per capita funding of France ($101 per head) and Germany ($86 per head). Image
As a result, the UK has the biggest tech sector in Europe, and the third largest tech sector in the world.

Given the UK's terrible policy environment, many of our brightest people move to the US - where they're overrepresented in creating successful companies.

Of US Fortune 500 companies founded by immigrants, nearly a quarter were founded by people from the UK.Image
Rolls-Royce, headquartered in London, is the world's second-largest maker of jet engines.

The company also produces engines for helicopters, fighter aircraft, and the F-35B LiftSystem.

Rolls-Royce is also working to develop a fleet of small modular nuclear reactors. Image
The UK is the world's 8th largest arms exporter - and was 2nd as recently as 2020. Unfortunately, the Government has actively worked against the interests of our defence industry.

BAE Systems remains Europe's largest defence contractor, with £23 billion in revenue as of 2023. Image
The British aerospace industry is the second-largest in the world, after the United States, and the largest in Europe.

The UK produces the high-technology wings for all Airbus models, and is also responsible for the design and supply of the fuel systems for most Airbus crafts. Image
Founded by British entrepreneur James Dyson in 1991, Dyson Ltd. maintains a significant UK presence.

In 2017, it opened a new high-tech campus on the former site of RAF Hullavington, near Malmesbury.

This 'Dyson Institute' is responsible for much of the firm's global R&D. Image
UK-based Ineos is the fourth largest chemical company in the world.

Around 75% of the world's motorsport R&D takes place in the UK.

Cambridge-based ARM is a specialist CPU design firm, and is responsible for producing the processor designs for almost all modern smartphones. Image
The UK is a top 10 global exporter of pharmaceutical products.

Cambridge-based AstraZeneca is the world's 9th largest pharmaceutical company. London-based GlaxoSmithKline ranks 13th.

The UK was famously the first country to roll out a clinically approved Covid-19 vaccine. Image
The UK is the world's largest exporter of alcoholic spirits, exporting around 1.8 billion bottles a year. This dominance is largely owed to the Scottish whiskey industry.

We're also sixth in the world for beer exports - and exports of English sparkling wine are growing quickly. Image
Despite our expensive hotels, the UK is the seventh largest destination for international tourism in the world, with 38 million visits from abroad in 2023.

The UK is home to 33 UNESCO World Heritage sites, including Stonehenge, Westminster Abbey, and Canterbury Cathedral. Image
We share a language - and close cultural links - with the United States. The US is our biggest single source of investment, and the UK is the third-largest source of investment for the US.

We remain a bridge into Europe - but with the regulatory freedom to diverge from Brussels.

We have developed investment relationships with the Gulf monarchies, India, and Japan.

So why aren't we the richest country in the world?Image
It certainly isn't the quality of our people - it's all down to policy.

Thanks to our arcane planning system, building in the UK is expensive and time-consuming. This is true of housing, but it's also true of lab space, data centres, transport and energy infrastructure. Image
The most harmful outcome of this is on energy.

We have the highest industrial energy costs in the developed world - which forces many British companies to close or relocate. How can innovative, but energy-intensive, companies operate in such an expensive environment? Image
This is particularly depressing when we consider that the UK has yet to fully exploit its domestic energy reserves. We still have enough North Sea oil to sustain production for another 35 years.

The size of our untapped shale gas reserves is even more remarkable - but politicians refuse to allow fracking.Image
Even if you can survive the expensive energy and the restrictive planning rules, you have to contend with our regulatory environment.

The UK has more than 90 regulators, and several hundred quangos.

Rather than using our Brexit freedoms to regulate less, the British regulatory state is dominated by bureaucrats who believe that their job is to eliminate all risk or negative externality.

As a result, these regulators end up eliminating growth altogether. New technologies are regarded with suspicion rather than excitement. Ordinary Britons lose access to new products.Image
The list of policy failures goes on.

Our migration system is poorly calibrated - life is made difficult for genuinely high-skilled migrants, while the floodgates remain open to low-skilled migration.

We're driving away high net-worth individuals, by scrapping policies like the non-dom scheme. Britain now loses more millionaires per year than any other country, besides China.

Rising crime in London, alongside a generalised sense of disorder, makes the UK less appealing to international investors.Image
If we could just get the basics right, the UK could be one of the richest countries in the world.

Provide cheap energy. Make it easy to build. Crack down on crime. Control the borders. Let businesses grow.

This isn't rocket science - but it does require political bravery. Image

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More from @sam_bidwell

Dec 23, 2024
By the 1500s, England's murder rate was lower than the murder rate in modern-day Africa 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿

And by the 20th century, Britain was one of the least violent societies on Earth - but why was this the case?

A 🧵 on the history of how England crushed crime Image
Mid 20th-century Britain was one of the least violent societies on Earth.

By the late 1930s, despite the mass unemployment caused by the Great Depression, the murder rate in England was similar to that of modern Japan (about 1 per 100,000 people).

But this wasn't always true. Image
14th-century London had a murder rate of about 22 per 100,000 - similar to modern Nigeria.

During the same period, Oxford had a murder rate of about 65 per 100,000, higher than any country in the world today.

Other forms of violent crime were also far more prevalent. Image
Read 25 tweets
Dec 18, 2024
A Turkish heroin peddler has been allowed to stay in the UK - because deporting him would infringe upon his "right to a family life" 🇹🇷

Somehow, this case is even worse than it sounds.

A short 🧵 on our broken asylum and immigration system

telegraph.co.uk/news/2024/12/1…
This case concerns a Turkish man, who first entered the UK in 1988.

He claimed asylum but was removed to Turkey just four days after arriving.

Nevertheless, in 1991, he was allowed to return to the country while his claim was being considered. Why was this necessary? Image
His claim was refused in March 1993 - but he was given exceptional leave to remain here, and was eventually given indefinite leave to remain as a refugee, in 1997.

The man's refugee status rests upon the fact that, as a Kurd, he is liable to be discriminated against in Turkey. Image
Read 20 tweets
Dec 17, 2024
In 1700, Manchester was an obscure village of fewer than 10,000 people - by 1900, it was a metropolis, the world's first industrial city 🇬🇧

Its remarkable growth is testament to the power of trade, industry, and British ingenuity.

A 🧵 on how capitalism built Manchester Image
For most of its early history, Manchester was entirely unremarkable.

In c. 79AD, a Roman fort was constructed on the banks of the River Medlock, the first settlement in modern Manchester.

The area remained largely depopulated and impoverished throughout the medieval period. Image
The one exception to this trend came in 1363, when a small community of Flemish weavers, from modern-day Belgium, settled in Manchester.

These weavers helped to establish Manchester as a local centre for textile production - which would one day power the city's growth. Image
Read 24 tweets
Dec 13, 2024
The British invented the modern world 🇬🇧

Few other countries can boast such a proud legacy of innovation and invention - for centuries, we have led the way on the development of new technologies.

A 🧵 on some of the world-changing innovations birthed here in Britain Image
In 1668, Englishman Sir Isaac Newton built the world's first reflecting telescope 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿

Newton's discovery was based on his understanding of prisms and optics.

It allowed scientists to develop a sophisticated theory of colour, and paved the way for the modern telescope. Image
In 1701, Englishman Jethro Tull developed a horse-drawn seed drill, which allowed seeds to be sowed in neat rows 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿

Tull's drill laid the foundations for modern mechanised agriculture, allowing farmers to plant more crops with fewer men - which increased productivity steeply. Image
Read 24 tweets
Dec 10, 2024
In 2023, after decades of turmoil, Argentinians elected maverick libertarian Javier Milei as President 🇦🇷

Milei promised to cut tax and spending, fire government employees, and get the economy moving again. 1 year on, it seems to be working.

A 🧵 on Argentina's nascent recovery Image
But first, some context.

In the early 20th century, Argentina had one of the highest per capita GDPs in the world - ahead of countries like France and Italy.

But thanks to decades of mismanagement, the economy is now in turmoil - in relative terms, it has declined steeply. Image
In January, year-on-year inflation had soared to an incredible 211 percent.

The country's rapid inflation is largely the result of public spending. For years, the country has run large deficits, despite sluggish growth, in order to appease the public. Image
Read 21 tweets
Dec 1, 2024
The UK economy has flatlined since 2007 🇬🇧

In terms of Gross National Income - a measure of the goods and services produced by residents and businesses from a country -, the UK has been practically stagnant.

A short 🧵 on the countries that the UK has fallen behind since 2007 Image
But first, some context - what is Gross National Income?

Gross Domestic Product (GDP) measures the value of goods and services produced in a country (including by foreign multinationals).

GNI focuses on income produced by residents and businesses from the country in question. Image
GNI is a more accurate measure of how economically successful a country's residents and businesses are.

It captures the income of British businesses abroad, but excludes the income of foreign multinationals headquartered in Britain, if that income is subsequently sent abroad. Image
Read 23 tweets

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