In this video, I explain why neoliberalism is not a mistake but a system built to shift power from people to corporations. This politics of destruction delivers an economics of failure with underfunded public services, rising inequality and shrinking democracy. I also explain why fiscal rules like those promoted by Rachel Reeves reinforce this failure, and why a politics of care offers the best real alternative.
This is the audio version:
This is the transcript:
In this video, I want to talk about what I call the politics of destruction. For a long time, we've called that neoliberalism, but I'm not misstating the truth by renaming it and calling neoliberalism the politics of destruction. I am deliberately calling neoliberalism what it is. And this politics of destruction is really important because it is designed to deliver an economics of failure, and we've got that all around us now.
If we do not name these things clearly, we will never challenge them. That is why I want to talk about them in this way, and today I want to explain why neoliberalism has been designed to fail ordinary people and why that failure is not a bug, but a feature of that system, which does lead to this economics of failure.
So, what do I mean by the politics of destruction? Let me be precise. The politics of destruction is intended to:
- undermine democracy,
- increase corporate power,
- increase income and wealth division,
- permit the extraction of ever larger rents and
- perpetuate inequality and poverty.
None of these is about rhetorical excess. These are facts. That is what this system set out to do. These things are the logical outcomes of a system that prioritises markets over people, capital over labour and profit over care.
Neoliberalism, the politics of destruction, shrinks the state and hands power to markets, but markets are not democratic institutions. They are governed by wealth. When public decision-making is replaced by market discipline, voters lose power and capital gains it. This is not a neutral act. It is a deliberate transfer of authority from citizens to corporations. That is why neoliberalism is so destructive. Privatisation, outsourcing, and financialisation: each of these is presented as a neoliberal efficiency regime, but in practice, each increases the influence of large firms over essential services.
We've seen it:
- energy,
- water,
- rail,
- housing,
- health, care;
all of these have become revenue streams for big business, and has there been a benefit to society? No, not at all. Corporate balance sheets might have expanded, but public accountability has contracted, services have declined, and that is a deliberate structural consequence of the choice made to follow the politics of destruction.
And let's be clear. In all of this, neoliberalism did not intend to primarily reward productive activity. It doesn't.
- It isn't about creation.
- It's all about ownership.
- Landlords extract rents.
- Financial institutions extract interest.
- Monopolies extract excess profits.
That's what neoliberalism is about. This is classic rentier capitalism. Value created by labour is diverted by the politics of destruction and neoliberalism to those who control assets. This is not a policy for growth. Let's be clear about that. There is no interest in production in this whole process. All that is desired is redistribution upwards.
When we hear those who talk about the politics of envy, claiming that those who want to see a better world are all about redistributing assets, they are actually naming their own chosen economic preference for activity to be undertaken under the guidance of the state. Neoliberalism has been all about redistribution, but upwards rather than downwards, and all of this is intensely destructive. When income and wealth are divided more sharply, political influence concentrates, social mobility stalls, poverty becomes entrenched, and this is not incidental. Deliberately high inequality weakens collective resistance and fragments solidarity.
A divided society is easier to govern in the interests of capital, and here is the crucial point. This is the economics of failure. The politics of destruction underfunds public services. It constrains fiscal policy with artificial rules of the sort that Rachel Reeves is so keen to promote. It insists the state cannot afford to meet need, and public services do as a result struggle to meet anything like need, let alone the level of demand that is created by the inequality that the economics of failure imposes upon society. And that struggle is then cited as evidence that the state does not work. That failure has, however, been deliberately manufactured. Never be confused about that point. The fact that we are now failing is not by chance. It is deliberate.
That is used then as the justification for the next round of cuts. This is what Farage and fascism now feed on. Neoliberalism led to it, which is why I argue all those who have led the neoliberal policies of this country have taken us down the pathway to fascism.
If we do not challenge this ideology, democracy will continue to be hollowed out, corporate power will deepen, and inequality will widen. At the same time, public services will deteriorate, and trust will collapse. We will end up with a society in which care is rationed. Insecurity is normalised, and wealth dominates politics, if we haven't got to that already. This is not sustainable.
Now, let me be clear. I am unashamed about my bias when talking about all of this. My bias is towards the poor, the vulnerable, and the precarious because any economic system should be judged by how it treats those with least power. That is the only criterion that matters as far as I'm concerned. Unless you care for the vulnerable, what is the point of politics? If policy protects wealth, but abandons the poor, it has failed morally and economically.
In addition, demand collapses when people have too little to spend because multipliers work in reverse. In other words, when the poorest have less, there is in fact a massive decline within the economy, which is why we have no growth now. An economy that impoverishes its base can never prosper.
As a result, we must change. What must we change?
Firstly, we must reject the idea that the state is financially constrained like a household. It very obviously is not. We know that the state can afford to do anything that is possible with the resources that are available to it; money is not a constraint.
Secondly, we must recognise that taxation is about redistribution, power, and the control of inflation, and not funding myths. In other words, it is a tool for the delivery of social policy.
Thirdly, we must reassert democratic control over all essential services, including by re-nationalisation where that is obviously necessary, which it is in many cases where privatisation has happened over the last three or four decades.
Fourthly, we must curb rent extraction, and to do that, we must change taxes, improve regulation, and change ownership where that is necessary.
This is real political economy in action, and on top of that, we do, of course, need a politics of care: an economy designed to meet need, and to reduce inequality while strengthening democracy and investing in people and this planet so that it might survive. Care is not softness; it is about economic realism and a security that delivers wellbeing, builds resilient demand, strong communities, and sustainable prosperity, and we are a very long way from having any of them.
Neoliberalism is then the politics of destruction. Never forget it. That is what it set out to achieve. It always existed from the moment that it was created in 1947 by Milton Friedman and Friedrich Hayek to literally destroy the social safety nets and the postwar consensus that delivered prosperity on a scale never known before to people of most countries in Western Europe and beyond, where they had previously suffered all the degradations of the pre-war era.
Neoliberalism, or the politics of destruction, does deliver the economics of failure. Again, that is deliberate. It exists to undermine democracy and entrench inequality by design. That is what that economics is about. And unless we confront that directly, reforms at the margins will never change anything, and that is the problem with most of the solutions being put forward in the UK at present by think tanks and political parties; they simply tinker at the edges without ever changing the systemic failures that we are seeing.
The direction of travel must be clear. We must restore democratic accountability. We must rebuild public provision. We must tax wealth and rents properly, and we must put care and not growth in capital at the centre of policy. If we do not challenge this politics of destruction, we will continue to live with the economics of failure, and we'll all lose as a result.
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Fully agreed.
Further, NL has its own internal logic which from observation I would say was naturally monopolistic concerning markets and anti-plural as far as politics is concerned.
In other words, despite using the language of freedom and liberty, NL is purely authoritarian.
Agreed
Recommended books and videos on neoliberalism:
Books
The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism by Naomi Klein
https://amzn.eu/d/fAmspcx
The Racket: A Rogue Reporter vs The American Empire (2024) by Matt Kennard
https://amzn.eu/d/6KsBdEl
The Invisible Doctrine: The Secret History of Neoliberalism (& How It Came to Control Your Life) (2024) by George Monbiot and Peter Hutchison
https://amzn.eu/d/hWvMzE6
Videos
The secret history of Neoliberalism | The Invisible Doctrine
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gR4eSEetKP0&t=26s
A Rogue Reporter vs. The American Empire (w/ Matt Kennard) | The Chris Hedges Report
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V1raT5Gxk_M
The Shock Doctrine (ENGLISH) – FULL DOCUMENTARY : The Rise of Disaster Capitalism
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aL3XGZ5rreE
Thanks, Ian
This post deserves to be read as widely as possible, because I’m sure it will resonate with the vast majority of people. As I read your opening paragraph I thought, “Well of course – that’s obvious – what’s new?” But your full piece draws out the implications and corollaries that may not be so obvious to “the man on the Clapham omnibus”. (Well, I hope it communicates to “him” – it’s a long time since I was on a Clapham omnibus.)
Thanks
There is a very telling interview on Naked Capitalism between Lynn Parremore and Professor Steven Woolf, posted on the 10 February 2026.
Professor Woolf: if you are a wealthy CEO involved in a car crash, badly injured, you may end up in a hospital emergency room that is struggling and there are consequences.
Lynn Parremore: an emergency room that may be cost cutting and understaffed thanks to private equity.
There is a link to another article by Lynn Parremore on the role of private equity in US hospitals on this point.
Private equity is only only interested in wealth extraction.
The NHS is out sourcing eye operations to private companies. Where do the patients go who have problems with their surgery sorted out? Why of course back to the NHS!
Thanks
I had to vote ‘unintentionally’ because i cannot believe Thatcher and Reagan had the intelligence.
For at least 45 years our leaders have SAID that the wealthy are the wealth creators, and if we are patient, some of that wealth will trickle down to us, but what they have DONE, through their destructive policies, is to make the poor, poorer.
We are now realising that the very wealthy are actually the wealth DESTROYERS, and that when the labour of the poor has been discarded, and the little wealth they have left, has been extracted to increase inequality, society itself begins to fall apart, economically, socially and environmentally. We are living that nightmare in real time – Gaza, Sudan, Iraq, Ukraine, food banks, homelessness, racial violence and global heating are the inevitable result of this politics of destruction.
Even the very wealthy have realised they are no longer safe from the consequences of their stupid greed.
(“Then he said to the crowd, “Don’t be greedy! Owning a lot of things won’t make your life safe.”
https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Luke%2012.15&version=CEV )
It doesn’t have to be this way.
Agreed
You are clearly correct in your labelling of Neoliberalism as the politics of destruction. It certainly shows no sign of being about personal freedom. The purpose of a system is what it does, and what neoliberalism has done is hollow out public services and increase inequality. It has destroyed our society. It has been the engine that has driven the revenge of the rich, their revolution to dismantle the post-war order of public services and the dispersal of power. It was clearly all intentional, as the system has been broken from the beginning, and no one in power has taken action to change it. In fact, when faced with its failures, the solution has been more neoliberalism. Austerity was the exact opposite of what we needed after the 2008 crash, but that’s what we got. Everyone cut loose to the whims of the Market.
And now we have Reform, neoliberalism’s End Boss, proving your point even further. They have nothing to offer but more neoliberalism, more destruction. The reforms they propose are to take us backwards; the changes they want are to return to Victorian era cruelty, where labour is merely a resource to be spent in pursuit of wealth. They are trying to convince the country that we need to leave the ECHR so we can get rid of immigrants, but what they really want is to get rid of workers’ rights. 12hr days, banning unions, reducing sick pay, rescind the right to family life. This has happened in Argentina, and it is clear Mielle is part of the same right-wing movement as Farage. Neoliberalism has completely failed, but its supporters still have all the money and are willing to throw it at anyone who will deliver more of this destructive, anti-human ideology. I wouldn’t let proponents of Hayek, Rand and Friedman look after my fish; I don’t know how they are running a country.
Thanks
I agree with your post. But it seems to me that neoliberalism is attractive to the non wealthy in the same way the euro millions lottery is attractive: playing will enable someone somewhere to become wealthy beyond their dreams but if you don’t play you’ll definitely not going to win.
People are prepared, against all manner of sage advice, to roll the dice and take a gamble to improve their meagre lot. How many voters have done that in recent times?
The problem is that the chances of winning are vanishingly small and the real winners are the ones running the lottery. It ever was thus, and I suspect no revolution in history has been won through the power of words alone.
You ask whether Neoliberalism is destructive by design and I haven’t voted yet – it’s because I don’t want to believe that there are forces out there that would deliberately trash society for their own gain but of course there are and I should stop being so naïve.
I always thought Harry Enfield’s character “loadsamoney” was satire, not something to aspire to and yet here we are. I think even harder than tackling Neoliberalism is the pervasive view that money = virtue and poverty = personal failure. It seems so deeply ingrained in society that unless this trope is killed off along with the household analogy, all of our attempts to put NL in the dustbin will struggle to take hold. I come across it all the time, as I’m sure you do too. Other than pointing out that it’s a generalisation – a condescending one – and reminding people that most of us could find ourselves in similar circumstances at any time, I’m not sure what else to do. Those who make such comments, I suppose, never think it will happen to them.
I am afraid I think they have deliberately trashed our society
And they still are trying to do so