Episodios

  • Billionaires won’t leave
    Mar 5 2026

    We’re repeatedly told that raising taxes on extreme wealth will drive billionaires and millionaires out of the UK and that the economy will collapse as a result.

    That story is economic mythology. In this video, I explain why the very wealthy are not as “highly mobile” as politicians claim, why money doesn’t “disappear” when someone changes residency, why businesses and jobs don’t pack up with the owner, and why a modest fall in sterling would not be the catastrophe we’re warned about.

    The conclusion is simple: we should design tax policy around justice and economic need, and not fear and bluff.

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    17 m
  • Political economy at Cambridge - Live!
    Mar 4 2026

    At our live event in Cambridge on 28 February I started the event by looking at political economy from 1759 to date. What I made clear was that Adam Smith talked about an economy of care and that’s what we need to be doing now.

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    56 m
  • Spring Statement on BBC 2 with Jeremy Vine
    Mar 3 2026

    Today Rachel Reeves gave her Spring Statement, take a listen to my comments on what she said on BBC 2 with Jeremy Vine

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    14 m
  • Rachel Reeves will get it all wrong today
    Mar 3 2026

    Rachel Reeves will present the Spring Statement as if she's delivering stability.

    The Office for Budget Responsibility will offer forecasts.

    Markets will be reassured.

    But the economics will be wrong.

    In this video, I explain why fiscal rules, headroom, and the household budget myth are political theatre, not economic reality. Governments that issue their own currency are not revenue-constrained; they are resource-constrained.

    If Britain wants growth, resilience, and functioning public services, we need investment, redistribution, and the politics of care, and not stability theatre designed to please bond markets.

    This is Funding the Future economics.

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    12 m
  • Tax does not fund spending
    Mar 2 2026

    Most people think tax pays for government spending. It doesn’t. In a modern monetary economy, governments that issue their own currency spend first and tax later.

    In this video, I explain the six real purposes of tax:

    • ratifying the currency
    • controlling inflation
    • redistributing income and wealth
    • repricing harmful activity
    • strengthening democracy
    • organising the economy for public purpose

    Understanding this changes everything about austerity, social security, inequality and public services.

    If we want a politics of care instead of a politics of fear, we need an honest debate about tax.

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    15 m
  • Why good economics can feel wrong
    Mar 1 2026

    People often ask me why the work we do on this channel and on the Funding the Future blog is so hard to follow. It is not because the economics is complicated. It is because what we say is counterintuitive.

    We have all been taught a story about money. We are told governments must behave like households, must balance their books, must cut spending on public services and social security because “there is no money left”. That story feels familiar. It feels safe. And it is wrong.

    In this video, I explain why good economics often feels uncomfortable. We are challenging ideas that politicians, journalists and economists have repeated for decades. When we explain that government is different because it issues money, that private saving requires government deficits, and that austerity is a political choice, people understandably hesitate. The problem is psychological, not technical.

    That is why we repeat ourselves. New viewers arrive every day. Myths repeated for forty years do not disappear after one video. And if we want a politics of care and an economics of hope, based on proper accounting and honest debate about public services and social security, we have to keep telling the truth about money.

    Bad economics has consequences. It leads to austerity, a failing NHS, broken local government and rising inequality. It pushes people towards the far right because they think nothing works. That is why this work matters, and why persistence matters.

    If you value clear explanations of government finance, tax and the real economy, please subscribe to the channel, share this video and help spread the word. Change only happens when people challenge the myths they have been taught.

    Read Funding the Future: https://www.taxresearch.org.uk

    Subscribe for daily videos on economics, tax justice and political economy.

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    12 m
  • Is MMT already in use?
    Feb 28 2026

    People ask whether modern monetary theory is “just theory”. I think that’s the wrong question. The real test is practical: does the UK actually operate as a modern money economy?

    In this video, I walk through the plumbing: Parliament authorises spending, the Treasury instructs the Bank of England, payments are settled through reserves, and only later do taxes and gilts come into play. That sequence matters because it tells us something uncomfortable but vital: austerity is a political choice, not an economic necessity.

    I also set out the real constraints: not “running out of money”, but real resources:

    - labour,

    - energy,

    - materials,

    - skills, and

    - technology

    and that inflation and climate limits should guide policy.

    If we get the ordering right, we can finally have the debate we should have had all along: what do we need, do we have the capacity, and how do we manage inflation fairly?

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    21 m
  • What's the biggest secret about money?
    Feb 27 2026

    People keep asking me how money is created, and the answer matters because misunderstanding money leads directly to bad economics and bad politics.

    In this video, I explain:

    1. Why money is always a promise to pay

    2. How commercial banks create money when they lend

    3. How the Bank of England creates money for government spending

    4. Why tax does not fund spending, and instead controls inflation and inequality

    If we misunderstand money, we accept false limits on spending on

    1. the NHS,
    2. social security,
    3. housing
    4. education,
    5. investment, and more.

    Once we understand money properly, we can build a politics of care instead of a politics of austerity.

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    19 m