Skip to main content
Advertise Buy the paper Contact us Shop Subscribe Support us
Can an economy be ‘big enough’?
CRAIG DALZELL asks how long the ‘growth at all costs’ mantra can be sustained by the main political parties

THOSE of us on the left have rarely been truly excited by the prospect of the Establishment crowning their next temporary placeholder, though I don’t know about you but this upcoming general election seems to offer even less in the way of actual choice or a chance for change than usual. 

The Conservatives are in freefall, ejecting ballast as fast as they can (personnel as well as policies), Keir Starmer’s “changed Labour Party” seems to be trying to do as little as it can to uphold the traditions of the middle word in that catchphrase and even in Scotland, where for the last several elections, the SNP provided some sense of counterpoint (either as a credible voting option or at least as an anchor against rightwards triangulation), that party seems to have hit the end of its road in terms of ideas. 

This time around, all of those parties (and several others) have congregated on a single line when it comes to how to manage the economy. Growth at all costs, no matter who profits from it or how much damage is done to the planet in the process.

Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
Similar stories
Full Marx / 26 August 2024
26 August 2024
The ‘degrowth’ debate raises critical issues to which only a Marxist approach can provide answers, argues the Marx Memorial Library
Britain / 11 July 2024
11 July 2024
Voices of Scotland / 18 February 2024
18 February 2024
Properly funded public services are good for the economy as a whole, says KATE RAMSDEN
Features / 16 February 2024
16 February 2024
Labour peer PAULINE BRYAN assesses a new report from the think tank, Our Scottish Futures