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About Politeia
Politeia is a forum for social and economic thinking. Its aim is to encourage reflection, discussion and debate about the place of the state in the daily lives of men and women across the range of issues which affect them, from employment and tax to education, health and pensions. The forum is independently funded, and the publications do not express a corporate opinion but the views of their individual authors.
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Politeia in the News! Minimize
Private Schools as Charities - The Axeman Cometh
The Economist 16/7/2009   read more...
No faith in the Charity Commission
The Guardian 15/7/2009   read more...
Charities 'should pay a levy for a legal fighting fund'
Third Sector Magazine 14/7/2009   read more...
Recovery may not be sustainable, CBI warns
Daily Telegraph 1/7/2009   read more...
Sustainable Growth Must Replace Economy 'On Steroids' CBI Leader Highlights Challenges For Britain
The Sikh Times 6/7/2009   read more...
We're in danger of entering a new Dark Age
The Daily Telegraph 04/04/09   read more...
Our society must be equal to the threats ahead
The Spectator 02/04/09   read more...
Dumb UK 'heading back to the Dark Ages' thanks to cult of celebrity, says senior Tory
The Daily Mail 01/04/09   read more...
Dreadful public finances can only be rescued by an early return to growth
The Independent 22/1/09   read more...
Don't Be Hasty: Financial Crisis
The Guardian 04/12/08   read more...
Freakonomics
The Times 28/10/08   read more...
What should David Cameron say?
The Guardian 01/10/08   read more...
Brown accused of 'terminological inexactitute'
The Guardian 01/10/08   read more...
The Londoner's Diary
The Evening Standard 30/9/08  
Stelzer doubts Tory finance plan
BBC Online 29/09/08   read more...
Conservatives and rail policy: what to expect?
The Transit 26/9/08  
A world crash. So, what next?
The Observer 21/9/08   read more...

Areas of Interest Minimize

Economy Minimize

What's New? Minimize
PRESS RELEASE: Politeia Publication - 'Teachers Matter' - Wednesday, July 22, 2009


England's Teachers at Bottom of the League. Lowest entry standards for primary, highest wastage and most over-management: urgent change needed, warns new Politeia study.

The teaching profession in England is in crisis, far more so than in other western countries compared in Politeia’s new study, Teachers Matter. 30-50 per cent of new teachers leave the profession in England within five years of starting and overall 12 per cent leave each year or retire - far higher proportions than in other European countries. Moreover, English teachers are the least educated. Official standards for entry are pitched far lower than elsewhere with only two GCSEs in English and Maths required to enter training. These are amongst the findings of Politeia’s new study, Teachers Matter. The comparison with other similar western countries shows that this country has a crisis in its teaching profession.

Politeia’s Commissioners conclude that the entry and training model has failed. Too many of the wrong candidates being are being admitted and processed through a system unable to equip them to teach. Entry standards are too low. Meanwhile pay and conditions are amongst the worst in the European countries, with the lowest final salaries and the highest levels of control, and consequently attrition rates. With half the profession nearing or over 50, urgent steps are needed.

For a full version of the Press Release, click here http://www.politeia.co.uk/Portals/0/Press Release - Teachers Matter.doc.>

An e-version of Teachers Matter can be found at http://www.politeia.co.uk/Portals/0/teachers matter.pdf.>  
PRESS RELEASE: Open Letter to Dame Suzi Leather from Sheila Lawlor

Charity Commission ruling on independent schools is ‘wrong in law’. Politeia Director asks Dame Suzi Leather to reconsider its confusing ruling.

In an open letter to Dame Suzi Leather, the Director of Politeia, Dr Sheila Lawlor, has urged the Charity Commission to reconsider its confusing ruling on Independent Schools, one which is not justified by the Charities Act 2006. Referring to Politeia’s new study by the leading Charity lawyer, Professor Peter Luxton, Making Law? Parliament v The Charity Commission, the letter points out that schools which are established educational charities are already deemed to be for the public benefit. They do not need to undergo further tests.

The letter warns that the Charity Commission’s approach is damaging to a wide range of charities which do not have the funds or the will to bring expensive test cases to court. Moreover, such overt politicisation of the law will damage the reputation of the Government’s regulator and bring the law into disrepute.

Dr Lawlor’s open letter to Dame Suzi Leather will be found below

A summary of the Luxton study can be found at http://www.politeia.co.uk/Portals/0/summary.pdf.>

Enquiries to Sheila Lawlor on 0207 240 5070 or
Professor Peter Luxton on 0114 266 8302 or 07855 995 439
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PUBLICATION: Making Law? Parliament v The Charity Commission by Peter Luxton

charity.jpgCharities, which have played such a part in British society over the centuries, are now an endangered species, warns Politeia’s new study, Making Law? Parliament v The Charity Commission . Though the new Charities Act of 2006 has not in fact fundamentally changed the law, the Government’s regulator, The Charity Commission, is acting as if it has done so, to the detriment of many charities.

Professor Peter Luxton explains that since Elizabethan times the law has held that certain public activities such as education, relieving poverty and promoting religion, are charitable and of benefit to the public. Others were added by the 2006 Charities Act but, as Professor Luxton emphasises, the interpretation of public benefit under law did not change.

However, the Charity Commission appears determined to overturn this traditional interpretation. Already a number of independent schools believe they will lose charitable status unless they meet the Charity Commission’s checklist or ‘guidance’. Meanwhile the universities, whose independence on admissions has been threatened by political threats, fear they will be next on the hit list.



Making Law? Parliament v The Charity Commission is available online http://www.politeia.co.uk/Portals/0/Making_Law_by_Peter_Luxton.pdf.">

 

NEXT LECTURE: Lessons for the Future: Education and Training for the UK David Willetts

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On Monday 20th July, Politeia concludes this extraordinary parliamentary year by returning to the themes which will dominate future policy. In its Summer Address, David Willetts MP, Shadow Minister for Universities and Skills, will discuss Future Models for Education and Training. He will consider what lessons should guide the UK to future success.


The lecture will take place on Monday 20th July 2009 at 6.30-7.30pm. If you would like to attend, please email Secretary2@politeia.co.uk.

 

PUBLICATION: A Premium on Patients? Funding the Future NHS, by Tony Hockley

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Few people believe that the UK’s healthcare system is working. Recent reports of the maltreatment of the elderly in Portsmouth NHS Trust or the failure of GP after hours care in Cambridgeshire, have heightened fears about the fundamental workings of the system.

Politeia’s next pamphlet, A Premium on Patients? Funding the Future NHS, suggests that the NHS no longer meets its founding aims and compares poorly with other healthcare systems. On a number of measures the NHS has lower success rates, e.g. cancer survival, treating asthma and the incidence of TB. Even the comparative outcomes in health between rich and poor are wider now than when the NHS was founded. .

For the future, the author, Tony Hockley, proposes that reform come through the system of funding. What is now needed is for the system of funding to evolve so that each person receives a per capita sum as a health premium. This would be set around the lowest per capital allocation (around £1,000) and a separate fund would top up using the remainder on the basis of need. The aim would be a system which responds to patients’ needs, rather than to the political calls of the day.

 


Recent Events Minimize
POLITEIA LECTURE: Green Shoots, Shallow Roots: Where next for UK Business? Richard Lambert

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On Wednesday 1st July, Richard Lambert, the CBI Director-General, gave the next lecture in Politeia’s Future of Capitalism series. As the UK faces a general election, high public spending and high public debt characterise the economy. The lecture considered some of the vital questions now at the heart of the policy debate, including:

• the future growth of the UK economy
• the size and role of the state
• the circumstances needed for the future prosperity of UK business
• the implications of the fiscal deficit for the public sector.


 

POLITEIA LECTURE: Booms, Busts and Fiscal Policy: Where Does the Future Lie? Dr Schuknecht

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On Wednesday 10th June, Dr Ludger Schuknecht, Senior Adviser in the Directorate General Economics, European Central Bank, gave the lecture Booms, Busts and Fiscal Policy: Where Does the Future Lie? in Politeia's 2009 series, The Future of Capitalism.

Across many countries high private debt and rapidly rising public liabilities characterise the post-boom environment. As western governments prepare to tackle the problems of their economy, Dr Ludger Schuknecht considered the challenges now facing policy makers. In particular, he addressed the important role of fiscal policy and explored such themes as:

• Reducing deficits and debt
• Right-sizing government
• Reforming social security
• Mitigating boom-bust cycles
 

POLITEIA LECTURE: The Future of Capitalism: A New Financial Architecture? Prof Dennis Snower

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On Monday 18th May, Professor Dennis J. Snower, President of the Kiel Institute for the World Economy in Germany, gave the lecture, The Future of Capitalism: A New Financial Architecture?, in Politeia's 2009 series, The Future of Capitalism.

 

POLITEIA LECTURE: Monetary Policy in a Free Society, Professor Tim Congdon CBE

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Last October the British government was said to have ‘rescued the world’ by the example of its re-capitalisation of the banking system. But in Politeia’s Monetary Policy in a Free Society, Tim Congdon will argue that the bank re-capitalisation was a disaster. It intensified the deflationary forces and wrecked the British banking system. Since then, the semi-nationalisation of two major banks has created new problems for policy and damaged the international competitiveness of the City of London. Professor Congdon will show that the credit crunch got worse, not better, in the months following the October bank re-capitalisation.

POLITEIA'S Spring Address: Defence and Security Policy of the UK, Dr Liam Fox MP

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On Tuesday 31st March 2009 Dr Liam Fox MP, Shadow Secretary of State for Defence, gave Politeia's 2009 Spring Address. As his party prepares for the next election, Dr Liam Fox addressed the problems which politicians must confront when in office and singled out the intellectual and cultural trends which often pervade and shape political action. Even relatively trivial trends can shape law and policy, though they may be contrary to the wishes of the electorate. In particular Dr Fox considered how such trends currently shape the defence and security policy of the UK and how they can be changed.
 

Politeia's Winter Address: Healthcare: The Future Challenges, Andrew Lansley CBE MP

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As the financial turbulence of the past year and the economic downturn in the UK dominate the policy stage, other areas of domestic policy have been overshadowed. Nonetheless, the UK’s healthcare system remains a priority for most people in Britain. On Monday 9th February Andrew Lansley MP discussed Conservative plans for the future to a full house at Politeia.
Politeia’s 2009 healthcare programme will consider developments in the policy debate in the UK and the detailed proposals for the future. It will also consider developments in healthcare policy in similar western European countries.
 

Politeia Lecture: Who Decides the Law on Charities – Parliament or the Regulator?

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Over the centuries British charities have played a vital part in helping people through life from their earliest education to coping with sickness and old age. Today Britain’s political leaders insist that they must continue to play an important role.

However, recent changes to the law and the Charities Act of 2006 may now hinder the good work and even threaten charities’ survival. In particular there is concern about the framework of regulation and the absence of a clear system, which could lead to a legal ‘no man’s land’ filled by politicians and regulators.

Politeia’s recent lecture, Who Decides the Law on Charities – Parliament or the Regulator? addressed the changes in law and regulation and the way they operate, the implications for Britain’s charities and the proper line to be drawn between them and the Government’s official regulator, the Charity Commission.
 

Lecture Series 2008: Regulation, Tax and the Global Economy - Is Regulation just another tax?

3.jpgGovernments now resort increasingly to regulation as an instrument of policy: Politeia’s 2008 series will examine the role and implications of regulation. Like the other instruments of policy such as tax and public spending, some regulation
may be necessary and efficient, some unnecessary and damaging. However, unlike tax and public spending, regulation
prompts far less political or public attention and debate.
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For recent events please
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Recent Publications Minimize
PUBLICATION: Banking Benefit by Dennis Snower and Alessio Brown

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With mounting unemployment in the UK, the welfare state is under ever greater pressure. But it is ill-fitted to meet the rising demands created by recession. Politeia’s new pamphlet Banking Benefit: Welfare Accounts for the Individual, explains that a fresh direction is needed so people can own their benefits and have greater incentive to work and save.

The authors, Professor Dennis Snower, the President of the Kiel Institute for the World Economy, and his colleague, Alessio Brown, explain that the welfare system is inefficient, unresponsive and without the mechanisms needed to change itself or change behaviour.

The authors propose a system of individual welfare accounts. People would ‘own’ the funds that finance their benefits and have the incentive not to waste them. There would be separate accounts for unemployment, education and training, health and retirement. The authors show how the transition to the new system would work and provide examples of the figures involved.

 

PUBLICATION: Banking on Stability by Edward George

It is with much sorrow that we have learnt of Lord George's death on Saturday 18th April



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The US Government bail out of Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae raises fresh questions about the UK system of financial regulation. Is the framework sound or are further controls needed?

In Banking on Stability: A framework for economic success, Edward George, the Bank of England's former Governor, explains how the system works and the problems now facing it. The move from tight controls to a market approach in recent decades has benefited both individuals and the country's economy.

Lord George assesses the recent turbulence against a background of economic slowdown, comparatively low interest rates and the banks' search for higher yield. There is reason for confidence in the future. Meanwhile, the market is best placed to learn, and apply, any lessons.

Banking on Stability: A framework for economic success is available online http://www.politeia.co.uk/Portals/0/BankingonStability.pdf">

 

PUBLICATION: A Prosperous New Year? Politeia's New Year's Message

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As the UK faces an uncertain New Year with recession threatening the economy, the Government still contends that the problems come from overseas. Yet Politeia's New Year Message makes clear that many of them are of our own making.

Norman Lamont, the former Chancellor of the Exchequer, and Vito Tanzi, the influential economist who directed the IMF's fiscal affairs department, make clear that the crisis has its origins in the failings of government as well as those of the international system.

As for the package to meet the crisis, neither Lamont nor Tanzi is confident that the fiscal stimulus measures on which the Prime Minister and his Chancellor pin many hopes will work. Instead what is needed is to strengthen the banks, restore the credit markets and ensure that the right regulation is introduced for transparency and to remove perverse incentives.

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PUBLICATION: Regulating for the New Economic Order by Vito Tanzi

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The banking crisis has put the UK Government under pressure to introduce greater regulation. There are growing demands for a new global framework under the IMF. But, as Vito Tanzi, the IMF’s former Director of Fiscal Affairs warns, regulations are complex tools and must be used with care.

In Regulating for the New Economic Order: The Good, the Bad and the Damaging Professor Tanzi considers the role of regulation, the many forms used by governments today and the consequences it can have. He explains that regulation is an economic tool like tax and spending and like them can be either good and necessary, or bad, inefficient and damaging.

Professor Tanzi warns that the Government should exercise restraint in introducing new regulations. He proposes a set of clear principles and practical steps to guide its course.

Regulating for the New Economic Order: The Good, the Bad and the Damaging is available online http://www.politeia.co.uk/Portals/0/RegulatingfortheNewEconomicOrder.pdf">

 


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