In today’s newsletter:
On Monday, the IEA will launch its new substack, Economic Affairs. With original daily content and a round-up of stories about the state of free markets in the world it will be the only site classical liberals need to read. We will be running regular columns from some of the titans of the free-market movement, including Matt Ridley and John Redwood, as well as introducing a number of stellar new contributors. Economic Affairs will be edited by Will Atkinson, one of our finest young writers, formerly of ConservativeHome, a Spectator leader writer and regular Telegraph contributor. These are challenging times for supporters of limited government. The government has gone from spending one pound in every three at the start of this century to closer to one in two. Debt has risen to 100 per cent of GDP. Taxes are higher than at any moment since the post-1945 demobilisation. Yet most voters think that our problems come from “neoliberalism”, and support spending even more, especially in the budgets that are already growing the fastest: healthcare and social security. We need to go back to first principles. We need to explain, to a country that has forgotten, why governments run things badly, why only the private sector generates growth, why we cannot return to prosperity without low spending, sound money, light regulation and free trade. Economic Affairs will be the place, not just to hear these arguments restated, but to find out how they are landing, to learn about the state of classical liberalism in Britain and the world. Please make it part of your daily reading menu. by Lord Hannan Director General The best way to never miss out on IEA work, get access to exclusive content, and support our research and educational programmes is to become a paid IEA Insider. IEA Podcast: Director of Communications Callum Price is joined by Editorial Director Kristian Niemietz and Director General Lord Hannan to discuss whether Britain is ungovernable, Brexit ten years on, and ask if air conditioning is right wing now? IEA YouTube How to make Brexit a successDr Kristian Niemietz on how to make the most of Brexit, ten years after the referendum:
News and Views“A good economist sees beyond the visible and the secondary consequences”, Daniel Hannan warns steel protectionism could harm 2.8m construction, 452k agriculture, 183k automotive workers reliant on imports, YouTube Why my friends talk about leaving Britain, IEA polling on perception of UK prosperity covered in The Times
Renationalisation doesn’t come cheap, Senior Economist Dr Valentin Boboc on why the case for nationalisation doesn’t stack up, CityAM “I don’t trust the Government to distinguish misinformation from correct information”, Chris Snowdon on GB News Tax Rises Built a Black Market. Is Britain Next? Chris Snowdon talks to former Australian Border Forcer official Rohan Pike about the negative consequences of a tobacco crackdown in Australia, IEA YouTube The nanny statists lack evidence for their campaigns, Chris Snowdon on the myth of evidence-based policymaking, CapX The cost of Net Zero, IEA research on what our environmental commitments are costing us, The Express
Events and OpportunitiesApplications are open for our 2026 Beloff ConferenceWe are delighted to invite applications for our 2026 Beloff Conference, a three-day residential programme taking place at the Vinson Centre, University of Buckingham from 14–16 September 2026.
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