Lord Adonis reviews Progressive
Capitalism: How to Achieve Economic Growth, Liberty and Social Justice, by Lord Sainsbury:
This book is equally important for what it says
and for who is saying it. The argument that growth, liberty and social justice
require a fundamental reform of capitalism is rapidly moving from the left to
the mainstream; and nothing symbolises this more than that David Sainsbury, the
epitome of the progressive mainstream since his days in the vanguard of David
Owen’s SDP in the 1980s, should be making it.
It is a powerful and cogent critique. Sainsbury
was an effective science minister under Tony Blair who greatly increased state
support for science. However, he writes: “It was only after I left government .
. . that I began to question fundamentally the neoliberal political economy
which had dominated governments in the western world for the last 35 years.”
Partly this was because of the 2008 crash and a
growing conviction that competitiveness required a “race to the top” – not neo
- liberalism’s “race to the bottom” – with state support for employment,
innovation and skills. But there was also a telling personal dimension: the
private equity takeover bid for his family firm, Sainsbury’s, in the summer of
2007.
“There was not the slightest pretence of trying to improve the performance of the company,” he claims. The bidders proposed “to sell off all the properties and replace them with massive debts. Then they would put the company back on the market . . . and walk away with £1bn of profit.”
The City was wildly keen, salivating at the £100m in fees the investment banks stood to earn: “a perfect example of wealth appropriation as opposed to wealth creation”.
“There was not the slightest pretence of trying to improve the performance of the company,” he claims. The bidders proposed “to sell off all the properties and replace them with massive debts. Then they would put the company back on the market . . . and walk away with £1bn of profit.”
The City was wildly keen, salivating at the £100m in fees the investment banks stood to earn: “a perfect example of wealth appropriation as opposed to wealth creation”.
The policy prospectus set out in the second half
of the book is a must-read for anyone seeking to make sense of that new
catchphrase “active industrial policy”.
Sainsbury recommends far-reaching reform of equity markets to foster the creation and expansion of companies rather than their destruction and foreign takeover; a “national system of innovation” with the state as a key player; and a revolution in technical and vocational education that emulates German strength in these areas, although he warns against copying Germany glibly.
Sainsbury recommends far-reaching reform of equity markets to foster the creation and expansion of companies rather than their destruction and foreign takeover; a “national system of innovation” with the state as a key player; and a revolution in technical and vocational education that emulates German strength in these areas, although he warns against copying Germany glibly.
On equity markets, he favours a big cut in the
fees paid to investment managers and a new “Shareholders’ Advisory Board” to
promote “an understanding of the fundamental value of the companies in which
[the City] invest[s]” rather than their short-term trading value.
Investment managers should also get far more involved in the governance of the companies they own, including the appointment of directors and holding them to account, and constrain the boardroom pay explosion which shows little sign of abating. A wildly overpaid City breeds a wildly overpaid corporate sector.
Investment managers should also get far more involved in the governance of the companies they own, including the appointment of directors and holding them to account, and constrain the boardroom pay explosion which shows little sign of abating. A wildly overpaid City breeds a wildly overpaid corporate sector.
Sainsbury is especially bold on takeovers. He
proposes higher “hurdles” in shareholder support required from within the
target company, and restrictions on those who can vote to those who have held
shares in the target company for “a certain number of years”. This goes way
beyond the 2012 Kay review of equity markets and long-term decision-making.
On innovation, Sainsbury supports the coalition’s
establishment of Catapult Centres – national technology and innovation hubs in
key industrial sectors, starting with highvalue manufacturing – but he favours
more support for new technologies.
Government departments should have “embedded units” to promote technology and innovation on a strategic long-term basis; and regional development agencies – abolished by the coalition in 2010 – should be restored “in parts of the country which need them”.
Government departments should have “embedded units” to promote technology and innovation on a strategic long-term basis; and regional development agencies – abolished by the coalition in 2010 – should be restored “in parts of the country which need them”.
A dramatic increase in the supply of technicians,
especially with engineering skills, is Sainsbury’s goal for a revamped
education and training system. Kenneth Baker’s new breed of university
technical colleges for 14- to-19-year-olds should be expanded and local
industry integrated in the management of further education.
Some would go further and seek to introduce an English equivalent of Germany’s “dual system”, whereby employers and local authorities take joint responsibility for a system of mass apprenticeships with highquality vocational training alongside.
But Sainsbury does not think this feasible because of the weakness of Britain’s chambers of commerce, trade associations and trade unions in comparison with Germany.
Some would go further and seek to introduce an English equivalent of Germany’s “dual system”, whereby employers and local authorities take joint responsibility for a system of mass apprenticeships with highquality vocational training alongside.
But Sainsbury does not think this feasible because of the weakness of Britain’s chambers of commerce, trade associations and trade unions in comparison with Germany.
Sainsbury would pioneer reform through an
“enabling state”, rather than through a return to “command and control”. But an
enabling state is not a smaller state. “A first task of progressive politicians
is to persuade people of the importance of competent and active government,
standing above sectional interests,” he writes.
This, conceptually, is a return to mainstream social democracy after its partial abandonment in recent decades. It cannot be achieved without a transformation in the capabilities of government, including a new national economic council and a much more purposeful civil service.
This, conceptually, is a return to mainstream social democracy after its partial abandonment in recent decades. It cannot be achieved without a transformation in the capabilities of government, including a new national economic council and a much more purposeful civil service.
Sainsbury also puts in a heartfelt personal plea,
from a public-spirited party donor caught up in party funding controversies,
for state funding of parties so that governments of both parties are better
able “to stand up to the financial power of interest groups”, be they trade
unions or investment managers and bankers.
A decade ago, this prospectus would have seen its
author branded “Red Sainsbury”. Now it is pretty sensible and mainstream. A new
centre ground is being forged.
No comments:
Post a Comment