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How Good We Can Be

Paperback / ISBN-13: 9780349140087

Price: £10.99

ON SALE: 3rd September 2015

Genre: Society & Social Sciences / Sociology & Anthropology

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Britain is beset by a crisis of purpose. For a generation we have been told the route to universal well-being is to abandon the expense of justice and equity and so allow the judgments of the market to go unobstructed. What has been created is not an innovative, productive economy but instead a capitalism that extracts value rather than creates it, massive inequality, shrinking opportunity and a society organised to benefit the top 1%. The capacity to create new jobs and start-ups should not disguise that in the main the new world is one of throw away people working in throw away companies. The British are at a loss.

The warnings of The State We’re In have been amply justified. Will Hutton observes that the trends that so disturbed him twenty years ago have become more marked. Rather than take refuge in nativism and virulent euro-scepticism, Britain must recognize that its problems are largely made at home – and act to change them. With technological possibilities multiplying, a wholesale makeover of the state, business and the financial system is needed to seize the opportunities by being both fairer and more innovative. The aim must be to create an economy, society and democracy in which the mass of citizens flourish. In this compelling and vital new book Hutton spells out how.

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Reviews

When the British left is so bereft of vision and so tentative about the modest ideas it does have, Hutton comes as a breath of fresh air . . . Hutton predicts a glorious future
Guardian
[Hutton] writes with passion, controlled anger, and a good deal of evidence about the ills that beset British society in the second decade of this century
Lancet
Policymakers are searching for a big idea to wake the economy from its slumber, to shake it from its stagnation. We are in luck. Will Hutton has found one
Andy Haldane, Chief Economist of the Bank of England
Will Hutton finds his clearest voice yet. The cities of London and Westminster should read and find a long lost humility. Everyone else may find hope
Shami Chakrabarti, Director of Liberty
A magnificent survey of a post-Thatcherite wasteland of financial gluttony, where shareholder value is worshipped above all else, public goods are squandered and inequality widens. Crucially, Hutton offers some richly innovative alternatives. His analysis burns with reasonable anger and brilliant hope
Ian McEwan
What New Labour lacked wasn't heart, it was ideas - and if the party is to win power again, it's going to need to listen to people like Will Hutton
Independent on Sunday
Hutton is as persuasive, and as furious, as ever. He is angry, and it is hard not to be angry along with him
Times Higher Education Supplement
Sweeps you off your feet with its hard-headed optimism, a vision of capitalism working for the many
Avner Offer, Chichele Professor Emeritus of Economic History at Oxford, and Fellow of All Souls College