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This is not a blog which opines on current events. It rather uses incidents, books (old and new), links and papers to muse about our social endeavours.
So old posts are as good as new! And lots of useful links!

The Bucegi mountains - the range I see from the front balcony of my mountain house - are almost 120 kms from Bucharest and cannot normally be seen from the capital but some extraordinary weather conditions allowed this pic to be taken from the top of the Intercontinental Hotel in late Feb 2020

Monday, July 6, 2026

THE SIX INVERSIONS

This is a useful post from Josh Hunt about what he calls "the great British inversion

The British state can still do some things quickly. It can stand up a furlough scheme in a
fortnight. What it can no longer do is build, plan, or reform at anything like the speed the
new era demands. The evidence is not contested, it is simply tolerated. No major reservoir has been completed in England since the early 1990s, in a country
whose population has grown by ten million since. Grid connections are quoted in years
and sometimes in decades, in a country proposing the largest electrification in its history.
Our last nuclear plant has been under construction longer than the entire Victorian railway
boom took to connect every major city in Britain. The planning application for a single
road crossing of the Thames has cost more than Norway spends building actual tunnels.
These are not anecdotes. They are the operating speed of the system. The deeper problem is that the system’s design assumptions match the old era exactly.
Annual budgets for compounding decadal pressures. Departmental silos for problems
that cross every department. A Treasury that prices everything at this year’s cost and
nothing at this generation’s. Political incentives with a four-year horizon facing inversions
with a forty-year one. The machine is not broken. It is doing what it was built to do,
superbly, for a world that has ended. History offers a clear, uncomfortable lesson about how machines like this get rebuilt.
They get rebuilt in crisis. The 1832 Reform Act passed under fear of revolution.
The Edwardian welfare state was born from the national panic when half the Boer War
recruits were too malnourished to fight. Beveridge required total war. The 1976 IMF crisis
forced in a fortnight what a decade of argument had not. The pattern repeats abroad:
Sweden and Finland built the most disciplined fiscal frameworks in Europe in the rubble
of their early-1990s banking collapses. Foresight is rarer, but it exists, and its examples are the most important data points in
this article. Singapore planned its water independence and its housing system across
half a century. Ireland in 1987, broke and bleeding emigrants, struck a social partnership
that held across governments and turned the country around inside a generation.
Estonia built a digital state from a standing start because it had no legacy machine to
defend. The common ingredients are worth stating: an honestly named emergency,
a coalition wider than one party, and mechanisms deliberately placed beyond the each of the annual political auction. Crisis reform works, but it buys the same destination at a vastly higher price, paid in
unemployment, disorder and lost decades. Foresight is cheaper. It is also, on the historical
record, much rarer. The whole argument of this article is that Britain still has the choice,
and that the window in which it has the choice is the next decade, not the next generation. VI. Britain on current trend Let me be concrete about where the current trend goes, using only published projections.
None of this is prophecy. All of it is what the official numbers say happens if nothing changes. Britain in 2036. A population of around 71 million that has stopped growing naturally and

  now shrinks in three of its four nations. One person in five of pensionable age.

Hundreds more primary schools closed; the university sector contracting as the

small cohorts arrive. The NHS, if its own plan is delivered, employing one working

person in eleven, with the wider care economy absorbing something approaching

one in seven. Debt interest still a top-four spending programme. Defence spending

rising toward 3.5% of GDP under treaty obligation, every pound of it competing

with care. Taxes at or beyond the post-war record. The gilt market pricing all of it,

hour by hour, through lenders with no particular attachment to Britain.

Britain in 2046. The 1960s baby boom fully inside the care system, the over-85 population
having roughly doubled, drawing on a workforce that has been flat or shrinking for a
decade. Workers per pensioner heading toward the OBR’s long-run figure of 2.7, and on
the honest count, workers actually in work per pensioner, materially lower. The state pension
alone costing nearly 8% of GDP. The OBR’s current-policy debt path passing 150% of GDP
on its way to a number nobody intends to reach, which means the correction, voluntary or
imposed, has happened somewhere in between. The honest way to read those two paragraphs is not as a prediction that they occur. It is
as a measurement of the gap between the trajectory and anything survivable, which is to  
say, a measurement of the scale of reform that is coming one way or the other.
That scale is the point. Nothing in any party’s current programme is within an order of
magnitude of it.
VII. The case against this point of view Now, I know what some will say, and the objections deserve better than a paragraph each,
because some of them are partly right.
Declinism is Britain’s oldest cottage industry. True. The 1890s panicked about
national efficiency and then won two world wars. The 1970s sick man joined the single
market and boomed. The base rate for British doom predictions is poor, and I hold this
objection seriously. But notice what rescued Britain each time: a growing population,
cheap energy, an expanding world order, and fiscal room to manoeuvre.
The rescues came from exactly the assumptions that have now inverted. Past declinism
was wrong about a country with tailwinds. The question is what the same country does
in headwinds, and that question has no historical answer yet. Immigration solves the demographics. It has, so far, genuinely. Without it the workforce
would already be shrinking. But three things bound the strategy. Migrants age too,
so the fix must be perpetually renewed at growing scale. The political tolerance has
collapsed, with net migration already down two-thirds from its peak. And the deepest
bound: fertility is falling everywhere. The countries we recruit from are on the same curve,
a generation behind. Importing working-age people is borrowing against other nations’
demographic futures, and the global lender is closing. AI is the productivity dividend that pays for all of it. Possibly. It is the one genuine
wildcard in this article, and intellectual honesty requires saying that a sustained AI-driven
productivity boom is the single scenario in which the fiscal arithmetic repairs itself.
But weigh the shape of the dividend against the shape of the need. The productivity gains
arrive in cognitive services, which is where the tax base lives, and the demonstrated effect
of automation on care, the actual binding constraint, is so far nil. A dividend that displaces
our taxpayers whilst leaving your costs untouched is a strange kind of rescue. I would
gladly be wrong about this. Fewer people is fine, even good. Per head, perhaps, eventually, and the environmental
case is real. Japan remains safe, clean and cohesive. But Japan entered its decline with
net assets abroad, an industrial export machine, and government debt held almost entirely
by its own citizens. Britain enters its decline as a net debtor, importing food and energy,
owing money to foreigners and hedge funds. The same demography, with the opposite
balance sheet. Services specialisation is an asset in any world order. The surplus is real and growing,
and it is the best card in our hand. But a services surplus buys goods only whilst the world
stays open, and it employs the workers most exposed to the technology. An asset, yes.
A foundation, no. Each objection, examined, does the same thing. It extends the timetable. None of them
changes the destination. That, in the end, is my answer to the optimists: you may be right
about the decade. The argument of this article is about the direction. VIII. Governing the inversion So what would a country that took all this seriously actually do? Not a manifesto. A sketch
of the categories, with one worked example, because the point of the article is the shape
of the response, not its every line item. First, it would measure the new era. You cannot govern what your instruments cannot
see. Publish an annual intergenerational account alongside the Budget, as New Zealand’s
Treasury does, so that every Parliament sees the forty-year cost of its four-year decisions.
Report the effective dependency ratio, workers actually working per pensioner, not the
flattering official one. Count the care economy, paid and unpaid, as the national infrastructure
it is. Second, it would take the compounding decisions out of the annual auction.  The most successful adaptations abroad share one design: automatic stabilisers placed
beyond yearly politics. Sweden’s pension system contains a brake that adjusts payouts
to demographic and economic reality without requiring any politician to commit career
suicide. Denmark and the Netherlands index the pension age to longevity by formula.
Britain instead re-fights every parameter, every year, in public, and loses. A serious country
would legislate the formulas once, honestly, and let arithmetic do what courage cannot. Third, it would rebuild the energy foundation as the first-order national project, on
the simple ground that energy is the economy and everything else in this article sits
downstream of its price. That means treating grid connections, nuclear delivery and
the planning system as a single national-security programme with wartime priority,
because the alternative, attempting history’s largest electrification at the developed
world’s highest power prices, is not a plan. It is a queue. Fourth, it would govern the care economy as a system rather than a staffing problem, which brings me to the worked example, because it shows what inversion-native policy actually looks like. Consider the multi-generational household. For two centuries the whole drift of housing,
welfare and planning policy assumed dispersal: the young move away, the old age alone,
and the state and market fill the widening gap between them. In the old era of abundant
workers and cheap money, that was affordable. In the new era it is the single most
expensive assumption Britain holds.
Because look at what one household arrangement does to the arithmetic of three different
inversions at once. The grandmother in the annexe receives much of her care as a
byproduct of household life rather than consuming a paid carer’s shift, easing the
second inversion. The same grandmother provides the childcare that releases her
daughter into the workforce, easing the first, and on the international evidence, families
with grandparents nearby find it easier to have the children they already wanted, easing
it at the source. The household needs one larger home rather than two or three small
ones, which changes the shape of housing demand rather than simply adding to it.
No new workforce is hired. No new tax is raised. The largest care provider in Britain
is already the family, five million unpaid carers strong, providing a second NHS for free.
The policy task is not to build something new. It is to stop punishing the thing that is
already holding the system up. And we do punish it, comprehensively. Council tax surcharges on annexes. Stamp duty
structured against combining households. Benefit rules that treat sharing a roof as a
fraud risk. A planning system in which a granny flat is a battle. California liberalised
accessory dwellings by right and watched tens of thousands appear in a few years.
Britain could do the same within a Parliament, at a fiscal cost of approximately nothing,
and it would be the first policy in decades designed for the country we are becoming
rather than the one we were. I offer it not as a panacea but as a proof of category. Inversion-native policy exists.
It tends to be cheap, because it works with the new grain rather than against it. There
are equivalents waiting in every domain: Buurtzorg-style self-managing care teams
that deliver more care per worker by removing the management layer rather than
adding robots; defence procurement that buys magazines of munitions rather than
museum pieces; a migration policy honest that it is a bridge with a closing far end,
and priced accordingly. Fifth, and hardest, it would tell the truth about the era, because every successful
adaptation in the historical record began with a country being levelled with. Ireland in
1987 was told it was broke. Singapore was told it could be extinguished. The national
efficiency panic of 1906 began with the publication of one honest, horrifying
recruitment statistic. The precondition for foresight is a shared, named emergency.
Britain’s emergency does not yet have a name. This article’s wager is that naming it,
the Inversion, accurately and without partisan blame, is the first act of governing it. IX. The choice Let me end where I began, with the threshold we cross this year. A nation that buries more people than it christens is not necessarily a nation in decline.
Japan is proof that it can be orderly, even graceful. But it is, unarguably, a different kind
of nation, running on different arithmetic, and it cannot be governed by the habits of the
old kind. Every inversion in this article will be managed eventually. Care will find its
workers or its substitutes. The debt will find its buyers or its restructuring. The energy will
be rebuilt or rationed. The defence will be funded or abandoned. The only open question,
and it is the largest question in British public life even though it appears in no manifesto,
is whether these adaptations are designed or suffered. Whether they arrive by foresight,
on our terms, over decades, or by crisis, on the market’s terms, in months. History says crisis. History is usually right. But not always. There is a version of this
country that treats the Inversion the way it once treated the threat of invasion, as a fact
that reorganises everything, that dissolves the luxury of the old quarrels, that makes the
impossible reforms merely necessary. A country that measures the new era honestly,
automates its hardest decisions, rebuilds its energy foundation, houses its generations
together, and tells itself the truth. We used to be that country in our worst moments.
The task now is to become it in time. The old era did not end with a bang. It ended in a
maternity ward, quietly, on an ordinary day, sometime around now. The new era began
the same way. Nobody noticed. That part, at least, we can still fix.
And the highly recommended Novara site offers this discussion about
how the UK can’t build anything