Prof G Markets - Why Britain’s Economy Is Broken — ft. Jagjit Chadha
Episode Date: September 19, 2025Ed is joined by Jagjit Chadha, Professor of Economics in the Faculty of Economics at the University of Cambridge, to discuss the major economic challenges facing the U.K. Professor Chadha also shares ...his insights on Brexit’s long economic shadow, how immigration has impacted the country, and where the U.S.-U.K. relationship stands today in light of President Trump’s state visit. Subscribe to the Prof G Markets newsletter Order "The Algebra of Wealth" out now Subscribe to No Mercy / No Malice Follow Prof G Markets on Instagram Follow Scott on Instagram Follow Ed on Instagram and X Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Today's number 60.
That is the age by which most people lose half of their taste buds.
Now we know why Scott has such bad taste.
Listen to me.
Markets are bigger than I.
What you have here is a structural change in the world distribution.
Cash is trash.
Stocks look pretty attractive.
Something's going to break.
about it. Welcome to profitry markets. We're starting with a Scott roast because Scott is not here
today. He's at a speaking event, so I'm sorry, Scott, you're going to get a roast today. I will be
handling this interview solo, but I'm very excited because we are speaking with Juggeet Chada,
who is a professor of economics in the Faculty of Economics at the University of Cambridge,
and he is going to talk to us today about the state of the UK, their economic situation,
their monetary policy and also their relationship with the US. So without further ado,
let's get into it. Here is our interview with Jagjit. Thank you so much for joining me on
Profji Markets. Well, Ed, it's an absolute pleasure to be here. I watched your show a number of
times and I was a bit worried about coming on, but I'm here. So let's get on with the interview.
Thanks for asking me on, Ed.
we wanted to bring you on because, you know, we spend a lot of time on this podcast thinking
about what is happening in the US. We are very US-centric. We're obsessed with what's happening
in America. We don't really spend enough time thinking about what's happening elsewhere,
including where I grew up, and that is the UK. And so I wanted to talk to you today to learn
about what is actually happening in the UK. It's been in the headlines a lot in business and
politics and in economics. So I'm just going to start with a very broad question. You can take it
wherever you'd like. What are the biggest issues ailing the UK right now from an economic
perspective? If we just put the victory at the Emmys on one side, which was pretty stunning,
I think the problem we've had in the UK since the global financial crisis, because we're a
country who hitched its ride very much to global finance. And the extent of the,
to which finance has been crimped or reformed or subject to all kinds of reforms and
constraints since the financial crisis, I think, has affected in quite a deep way the UK economy,
which we can come back to a little bit later. But that process of slowing down has been
exacerbated by Brexit. That is the vote in 2016 to leave the European Union. Of course,
we didn't leave for a few years afterwards. But the uncertainty that
ensued as a role to that vote as we worked out how we were going to leave, whether
we were going to leave, and under what terms we were going to leave. I then introduced the one word
that all scoundrels and economics use all the time, which is uncertainty. Nobody really knew
what was going to happen to our trading links with arguably our most important partners in
Europe. And that is clearly shown to have reduced business investment, which of course you'll know
was a driver of economic growth, also led to some stalling in FDI as countries outside the euro
area had to decide whether to continue to invest in the UK, which was very much seen as an
entrepreneur. You invest in the UK, and then you get access to European market. So that was also
lost. And of course, foreign investors anyway who want to invest in the UK and wondering,
what the heck is going on in this country? Because the political turmoil led to several
changes in prime minister, Lord knows how many chancellors. And ultimately, with the,
what can only call the comedy event of the mini budget of 2022 under Liz Trusses' prime
ministership, which led to a persistent escalation in bond deals, which some argue are still there,
suggesting some risk in the UK economy that wasn't around. And so what you have is the original
shock of the global financial crisis, an exacerbation of economic crisis.
divergences across the country, a lot of it was blamed on the European Union, a lot of it was
blamed on foreigners, particularly from Europe, and a lot of it was kind of blamed on the government
for not being in control of economic growth. That then gets exacerbated by subsequent events.
COVID, which we had very high death rates from in the UK, but particularly in social care.
So we didn't manage that particularly well after the period of political uncertainty I've talked about.
And then you've got the kind of cost of living crisis because, and let me sort of go through
very briefly, because the supply side of the economy had been so badly damaged by the global
financial crisis, Brexit, and underinvestment in public goods, infrastructure.
That means the supply side had become much less flexible than you would have wanted it to be.
So you've got this kind of supply side that's not responding to shocks in the way that you want.
And as a result, when there is a large shock to food and energy prices, it works it way through to a very high rate of inflation, a double-digit inflation for the first time in a couple of generations.
And it has a situation where the Bank of England had to work very hard to bring it back down to sensible levels.
And you notice, of course, we're still hovering around 4%, which is twice the target.
And I think the bank rightly decided to do this in a gradual manner rather than an abrupt manner
because it didn't want to take a risk with increasing or stoking higher levels of unemployment.
So what you've got is a very sad tale of an economy that's performed badly
as a result of a sequence of global and domestic shocks that has led people feeling pretty sore.
A few things strike me there.
One is that you paint the picture of a country and a trajectory that is sad. And I really think
that is the right word. I mean, this once great economic superpower that has really fallen
into this state of stagnation. And that's not hyperbole. I mean, you just look at GDP growth
as an example, which is literally stagnant, you know, zero growth last month. But the thing
that's so interesting about the UK, it's got all of the problems that everyone else seem
to have, or at least everyone else seems to have in the Western world. You know, you've got these
issues with inflation, you've got these issues with polarization, you know, all of those things
that you mentioned that made problems worse in the UK, the great financial crisis, COVID. These
are all global problems, except in the UK, it's almost more intense than anywhere else. I mean,
you look at inflation just as an example. We're over here in the U.S. complaining about 2.1
7%, 2.9% inflation. You're over there in the UK with 3.8%. And one thing I think about
is, you know, what makes the UK different? The UK's been faced with a lot of the same challenges
that everyone else has. It's got similar debt problems. It's dealt with the similar supply chain
issues of COVID. And I try to think, okay, what is the difference? The one thing that really
stands out to me is Brexit. And I wonder, from your view, as an economist, to what extent
did Brexit play in this stagnation and this decline in the UK? I think the way to think about
this is that we were in a form of decline through poor political leadership, institutions that
weren't working at the regional level, a failure to get to grips with globalisation,
we can talk to that, talk about that in a minute. It all came a bit too easy to the UK.
UK is an incredibly open economy. And to go back to your earlier point is, is just as open to global shocks as
anyone else. But I would argue even more so in the sense in which labour migration, the ease with
which people can enter the financial sector, the eases which you can buy housing property here.
Have you ever tried to buy a house in France compared to London? I can tell you which one is
easier. You know, we are just naturally much more open and a trading nation, which then means that
when global shocks come along, we're more sensitive to them. And I think you were hinting at this
point, how is it we were able to deal with them in the past when we can't deal with them now?
Well, of course, for a large part of that past, Britain was itself in charge. It had its own
ability to deal with shocks because it was on top of an empire. Now, we can talk about the pros
and cons of empire. You can clearly tell from my background as well that that affected my family's
life. But I don't think, you know, I'm not sure we got to grips with the post-imperial
problems, particularly well. But even more so, I'm not sure we got to grips the globalisation.
It all came too easily. In the 1990s, it looked like a free good. We were going to get cheaper goods
from China. We were going to get cheaper workforce from Europe. And everyone will be better off.
But what we don't understand or didn't understand well enough is that when you open up trade, there are domestic winners and losers.
People who are working in high-income areas, I pointed them out earlier on, will certainly gain from cheaper manufactured goods and the ability to hire labour, whether it's to do your patio or look after your children as an opair much more easily than they would if they're just relying on domestic labour force.
now that's all well and good for people on good salaries who've had very good educations
all those initial conditions that mean you have a good life which i don't begrudge anyone
but they've got that but then as a result you've got local labor call it semi-skilled
call it blue collar in estates whatever you want to call it that is suddenly not able to have
those jobs that have been that have been taken by other people and to the extent to which
we're buying manufactured or finished goods from the Far East, that reduces the demand for
domestically produced goods, is something that the US is subject to as well. But the correct
policy response was not to leave these people who lost their livelihoods alone and let them fester.
It was to divert money, to retrain them, give them opportunities, build up local connections
and infrastructure, offer them forms of finance so they could develop their own businesses,
build up their income to compensate for what those communities lost from the jobs that essentially
were either taken from people abroad because we were importing goods that they used to make,
or we're taken from people abroad who'd migrated here.
And that was the missing part of our response to globalization.
We just thought automatically everyone would be better off, not understanding the heterogeneity
of the working population well enough.
And I think there's another problem in there as well.
the UK is far too London-oriented. If things are all right in London, policymakers, the elites, don't notice. So there are some severe regional imbalances in this country. And I think that's driven by a centralisation of policymaking, a centralisation of elites. And to be clear, I've got nothing wrong, nothing against elites, you know, or nothing against anyone who's lived their life in London. Myself, I was born in Yorkshire, so I have a good sense of what it's like in other parts of the country.
But I think that's part of the problem as well.
There's not enough people who understand or are willing to spend time thinking about how other parts of the country are adjusting to the kind of shocks we had or continuing to have.
On this point of the linkage between what we're seeing in London, the economic growth that we've seen in London over the past several decades and how that relates to policymaking, and you said earlier that you think that Brexit was really a symptom.
of bad policy and continued centralization of policy in London,
if I were to sort of illustrate a cartoon of what's happening,
it would be public school boys who go to Eaton,
and then they go to Oxford and they go to Cambridge,
and then they work their way into Parliament
where they are basically figuring out and designing policies
with no real understanding of how the country actually works.
They've grown up in a very, very privileged bubble.
The bubble has sort of pushed them on into power.
You've got people like Boris Johnson
would probably be your prime cartoonish example.
And as a result of that,
you're seeing these issues where the economy
seems to only really be serving
a very small subset of people
who have a very unique set of,
characteristics and generally speaking, it's rich people living in London. I'm creating a cartoonish
picture of what's happening, but I'm wondering if you think that that has any validity. Is that
really the story here of what's happened in the UK? I think our political leaders are poor
at the moment. The leaders of our main two parties have currently got huge negative readings.
You look at the balance of people who are in favour of them and the balanced people who are against them.
It's something like minus 55 for the Prime Minister and minus 20 something for the leader of the opposition.
These are huge negative numbers which suggest that trust in politics is very poor.
And we live in a democracy.
Being a politician is not easy.
It's a thankless task.
It's not something I'd ever want to do.
Knock you on doors, dealing with party members, trying to get people to vote for you.
and it takes a particular kind of person to do that.
So we haven't got a system, perhaps, with the caricature that you've painted,
that's delivering sufficiently competent people to deliver policy.
Policy is not easy.
It's very hard to sit down and work out what's robust,
what's going to work,
and what brings about the outcomes that the people really need.
It cannot be a partisan matter.
It cannot be a question of something you've believed when you were 15
and you're going to carry it through now.
Certainly the answers are not in books written by a dead economist from 100 years ago.
It really is a difficult process of choosing.
When we say to govern is to choose, it really is,
but it's to choose across alternate things.
So going back to your point, you need time.
You need people with experience.
They just tend not to impress.
and what we get as a result
is policymaking made in a crisis
so it's not being deeply thought through
it's kind of what do we do now
bond yields have suddenly shot up
what's the right answer
to get elected next week
you know what I'll do I'll promise not to raise taxes
well hang on a minute
debt to GDP is 100%
we're not growing
so how are you going to bring it down if you don't raise taxes
now I'm not a big guy for raising taxes
I think they're disincentives to work.
But there could be a case after something as profound as COVID
to have some temporary taxes brought in
to try and correct the fiscal position.
Now, it's not the answer,
but it's also not rocket science to think about that.
But we don't have people who are taking a step back
in thinking about things.
We just get announcements on the hooth.
And we also want politicians
take ownership of their choices.
You know, I did this,
and I will be judged against this.
And we don't get enough of that in this country.
They've often moved on, or they'll change their mind or decide to do something else.
For example, our current government was elected on the promise of bringing about growth
and that there will be no new taxes on working people.
Whatever that means, I don't know anyone who doesn't work, but fine, let's use the phrase working people.
We'll probably find that second pledge will be broken in the budget in November 26.
As I've said, you've got very high levels of debt to GDP by peacetime standards.
We don't have 100% a debt to GDP.
We don't have the United States exorbitant privilege
where everyone wants to hold some dollar T-notes.
35% of our debt is index linked,
which means it's been very expensive in the last four or five years because of inflation.
We're now paying nearly 4% of GDP in debt service costs on that debt,
is higher than comparable partners are paying because of the structure of our debt.
So, and if you've got no growth on top, there's a solution there. We should think about
income taxes and not at the top. That's not going to raise very much. It's going to be
income taxes for people in the middle who maybe will determine the fate of elections, but
politicians have to persuade people that this has to be done. Otherwise, we'll be facing a fiscal
crisis where we can't sell our debt, and all of a sudden we don't have any money to do anything.
And they're not grabbing that nettle. They're not saying this needs to be done.
There's lots of cheap talk about the whole thing. And as a result, I think markets are getting
quite feebrile about the UK's fundamental position. You've got lots of debt. You need money
to pay for it. So what are you going to do? You have to be brave at this point. It's not clear
we've got politicians prepared to take that level of ownership.
We'll be right back.
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We're back with Profty Markets.
These issues of the UK's public finances are, they seem to be what really dominates the economic
conversation in the UK.
And I think there is a crucial point in there that you mentioned, which is, you know,
the UK has very similar debt problems to the US, you know, debt to GDP, nearly 100%,
you know, 5% of GDP in deficits, which is lower than the US, but, you know,
But again, as you mentioned, the big difference for the UK is that the pound isn't the reserve
currency for the world.
So the UK doesn't have that level of leeway.
We don't get, the UK doesn't get to play the card that the US gets to play.
And that's why this issue of balancing the books is such an important issue for the UK.
And, you know, you mentioned earlier the mini budget of 2022, which by the way, I think is
probably worth explaining. I don't think people in the US probably necessarily know about that.
This was this issue with the previous Prime Minister of List Trust. But this issue of budgeting
in government is huge in the UK. And it appears that what has happened, if I would have just
look at it from a very simple point of view, is they've taken on too much debt, they've gotten
complacent, and they have forgotten the fact, it seems, that they cannot play the same playbook
that the US plays. They don't have that exorbitant privilege. They don't have the global
reserve currency card. So I guess my question to you would be, how did the UK get to this
point? How did the UK put itself in this hole where it is struggling with debt issues?
We are seeing long-term guilt yields, it's the UK equivalent of a treasury, long-term yields spiking right now.
Why are they in this position right now?
We have this fiscal framework, and the fiscal framework is run by an organisation called the Office of Budget Responsibility.
And what that does, it forecasts where debt to GDP will be in three to five years' time.
And the fiscal rule is that by the final year, debt to GDP should be falling.
So you have a sort of charade where the chancellor, who's the head of the Treasury,
the finance ministry in other countries, works with the OBR in the run-up to a budget,
producing different fiscal plans.
And the OBR then projects forward, given what it thinks is going to happen to GDP, employment, exchange rates,
and forecast what's going to happen to the GDP end years ahead.
providing that in the final year they forecast debt to GDP is going to fall,
the Chancellor can stand up on Budget Day or Autumn Statement Day and say,
ah, the OBI has said our fiscal rules will be met.
This fiscal rule is a nonsense because you could have three years in which debt to GDP is rising,
providing it falls in the final year by some small Epsilon amount,
the Chancellor could stand up and it has indeed stood up and said,
we hit our fiscal rule.
But it's not a fiscal rule that ensures that debt to GDP is falling in any meaningful sense
or is stationary in a sense of which it's going back to some normal peacetime level,
which I would gauge it around 60% to 80% of GDP, which is, you know, where we are in Germany, for example, 80% of GDP.
You can have growth for four years, providing someone forecast a fall in the fifth year.
And what you've had at the same time contemporaneously is extremely cheap.
debt issuance, QE, low interest rates over this period.
So it's been very easy for governments to issue debt and pay very low levels of interest
on it.
So really, the government has just gobbled up a free lunch.
The level of debt is really tracing out the demand curve for debt at very low interest,
the low interest rate, the more debt the government has issued.
And what you've found is that, okay, as you say, as with many other Western economies,
the crises that we've had, let's just put Brexit on one side, a huge shock for the UK economy,
It was an increase in QE there as well.
But whether it's COVID of the cost of living crisis,
we see most Western economies provided correctly support for people who couldn't work at that time
so the economy could keep going.
But our support was generally larger and more generous than we saw in other economies.
You know, our governments, possibly because they were worried about the electoral business cycle,
were giving out huge amounts of money over this period,
which led to a sharp increase in debt.
And what we've had since the end of COVID
is governments that either hue, blue or red,
have promised to reduce expenditures and increased taxes
but have reversed those statements in advance of any decisions being made.
So what you have is really nothing to tie down
those promises of the government that are made in the early part of the year
and then reverse later in the year.
And as a result, debt to GDP is not falling.
It's just staying very high.
There's no sense of responsibility or ownership of the fiscal position
because the level of ownership is simply that the OBR is going to project a fall in debt to GDP
in three or four years' time.
That leads to bankruptcy in the end because it doesn't lead to a fall in debt to GDP.
This whole debate that we've had in the UK about how much space is there
between how much the Chancellor wants to spend and where the OBR will say debt is falling,
the so-called fiscal space
is a number that has dominated
fiscal discussions
for over a decade. But what
we haven't had is a proper
public debate about what fiscal policy is
for. What's the return on
building up the education sector?
What's the return on building better roads, infrastructure,
broadband? What's the
return on public investment
in the health service? All of these things
are huge, large and positive.
And a grown-up debate
would sort of say to ourselves,
How much do we have to put in there?
Okay, we've had a shortfall of investment, public investment, since about 1980.
You can't reverse that in one parliament.
So again, you need maturity to say, look, this is going to take me 10 or 15 years to nurture
the capital stock in the public sector to where it's going to be.
I can't do it in one parliament.
I'm going to do it very gradually.
I'm going to do it with the approval of the financial markets
because I'm going to explain exactly where we're going to spend the money
what the social return is
and how that's going to lead to an increase in revenue
in the future. That's not what's going on.
As you say, there is this debt issue in the UK
and the argument has been
from the current administration in the UK
I remember a year ago
the now transfer of the exchequer
that's the UK's equivalent of the Treasury Secretary
Rachel Reeves
was really emphasising the importance of growth
what we have to do is we have to spark growth in the economy
and we are going to figure out a way to sort of grow ourselves out of this
and by the way this is the same argument we hear
in the US as well
that's the argument we hear when we see these massive deficits
and this massive debt load they say don't worry we're going to grow
and that's going to pay for it the economy is going to roar
We're going to see technology and AI, and it's going to grow the economy, and then we're going to be okay.
So we're looking now at GDP growth of zero in July.
That was the most recent reading.
What has gone wrong?
How is it that this parliament, which said this was our number one thing that we want to get done is we want to spark growth in the economy?
How is it that the economy is not growing?
The economy is hardly grown since Brexit.
I've described it as we've been in the doldrums for quite some time.
It's been very little.
We had some return from it.
It took us longer to get back to the pre-COVID level of GDP than most of our trading partners.
So we've just had sluggish growth in the doldrums since Brexit.
While I lured the long-term aim for growth,
And actually, the US has done pretty well on that front.
And it should be congratulated for the level of growth we've seen in the UK, in the US.
It's remarkable, remarkably impressive.
A lot of that, of course, is hitched on modern tech and frontier R&D and research.
Not sure how much of it is policy versus AI.
It is a good outcome.
But the problem we have in the UK is that...
Even if there was a silver bullet for growth, it wouldn't bring it about quickly.
You can't change the trend rate of growth from most estimates,
the National Institute, where I was that before, Bank of England, the OBR,
basically put the trend rate of growth at somewhere between one and a quarter to 1% a year.
You can't move that up quickly.
History is littered with the mistakes of politicians arguing that they could raise the rate of growth quickly,
the permanent or the supply-side rate of growth.
And in every case, that's just led to an inflation.
Whether we look at Latin America,
whether we look at the UK or Europe or Italy,
it just leads to an inflation.
So, and given that the policy was elected for one parliament,
the growth objective makes sense over the longer run,
but I do think that that was a mistake
to not seek out a mandate for fiscal consolidation
in the run-up to the election.
Labor Party in the UK is often thought of as the Proflage Party
that leads to fiscal problems.
And I think had they sought a mandate for fiscal consolidation,
they could have done the things that are required
that we've been talking about today,
thinking about appropriate changes in taxes,
creating, I hate the phrase, fiscal space,
that would have by itself driven down bond yields,
hopefully led to more investment because interest rates would have been lower,
would have reduced the pressure on the Bank of England.
One of the reasons inflation is higher is because the fiscal impetus that we're seeing at the
moment in the UK that would have allowed bank rate,
which is what we call the policy rate here rather than the federal funds rate,
to have come down more quickly than we've seen,
that would arguably have led to faster growth than we've seen.
Instead, what we've had is continuing commitments on growth,
which essentially governments can't control.
Uncertainty at the policymaking level
where expenditure plans to cut
have been reversed,
had we made fiscal consolidation
the focus of policy,
I think this government would have been a lot better off
rather than focus on something
that they ultimately can't control.
And I think that failure
has not helped the growth rate
in the UK economy.
It sounds like one of the solutions
that you believe
would get the UK-
the right track again is public investment, which, as you say, has massively declined.
Public investment in infrastructure, public investment in schools, sort of the long-term investments
that are made at the governmental level. Talk more about why you believe that is the route
forward and perhaps any other solutions that you think could get the UK back on the right track.
Well, I think all forms investment are helpful. It's not just public investment.
business investment by firms who feel sufficiently confident in the future of their firm to produce
revenues and employment and grow would also want to invest. So I'm not sort of just wedded to
public investment, but I do think we're in a space where it's not necessarily the case that
public investment crowds out private investment. You look much younger than me, but the whole
debate in the past used to be you don't do too much public investment because it'll crowd out
private investment. But of course, a lot of public investment is complementary to the private
sector. Private sector cannot work without a well-educated workforce. The workforce cannot get to work
without a good transport system. There are things that come together there. We can't expect
people to work if the health service doesn't keep them fit. There are interactions here that the
simple-minded approach on crowding out was often missing. And of course, we're probably in a country
where it's potential right now is much higher than what we're observing.
So potential output may well be something we can stoke
with appropriate interventions in the public sector.
But that said, I would like to think of a world in which there's more private investment
and too much private investment is centred in the southeast.
It's not clear to me that the financial sector evens out its investments.
It's itself looking mostly at its own naval and southeast
rather than other parts of the country.
I think it can be phenomenally hard for SMEs in the north to gain the kind of finance that they need to grow.
So it's got to be thinking about public, private and FDI.
How do we replace the FDI that we've lost foreign direct investment that is not coming here now
because the UK doesn't provide access to the European Union.
We'd had some bad news last week with AstraZeneca,
deciding to not invest in the UK and rather invest its new plants in the States.
And we think about why that was and how we can prevent those kinds of things happening.
Skills training is not only at the schools level.
It's vocational training.
We have to think about language, programming, training, things that aren't necessarily taught at traditional universities.
How do we get more vocational trading, which may be more useful?
We might be taking a step back there, but there are certain people for whom, you know, reading economics or
reading history, Paris has thought, may not be the right thing to do. It could very well be
the right thing for them to do is something vocational and practical. And of course, the country's
crying out for these skills. So we could think hard about how we develop that system. I mean,
there was a moment, I think, after Brexit, where those who went on nursing degrees had their
fees paid because we needed more nurses. I think more imaginative thought there at higher
levels would be very helpful to our labour force and potentially reduce the demand for immigration
that would help some of the issues that were discussed at the weekend.
I just wanted to touch on immigration, because you mentioned immigration there, and it seems
that immigration has become more of an important conversation in the past couple of years or so,
and the reason I bring this up is these images and these videos that I saw this week of this
nationalist rally, you know, hundreds of thousands of people debating how many people actually
showed up. But certainly thousands of people outside of Big Ben, reading about it and hearing
about it, they're really protesting immigration. I mean, there is a growing feeling among
Brits today that immigrants and asylum seekers have come into the UK and are taking the country.
And I'm being a little bit simplistic, but more or less that is what is being said.
This is sort of the great replacement theory on steroids is what is happening in the UK right now.
What is the truth on the issue of immigration in the UK?
I think everyone would agree it's had a real impact on the economy, but then it also veers into just flat-out racism.
that's something I've certainly seen in the UK.
I mean, what is the word on immigration in the UK
and how it has affected the UK?
When the accession countries,
the Eastern European countries joined the European Union
in the early noughties,
we had analysis suggests that not that many
would migrate from Eastern Europe into the UK.
In fact, those numbers were out by a very large factor.
We had huge levels of migration.
that was by and large
immigration of
white eastern Europeans
who are
less
let me just put it this way less visibly foreign
and
arguably we're able to integrate
relatively easily
now that may be wrong
no doubt all kinds of examples of
racism's all eastern Europeans but
my own sense watching the thing over the last
20 years it's been a little bit easier
for the simulation of
of those people. Now, our labour markets were still short of people willing to do low-skilled jobs,
whether it's in the NHS, the National Health Service, or in hospitality. And so after Brexit,
we changed some of the visa regulations, and a lot of those jobs were not taken by Europeans anymore.
They were taken from people from the other parts of the world, other parts of the world,
who generally had a different hue about them. Let me just put it that way. And this was then noticed
that people were coming in in large numbers.
Now, the actual facts are that if we separate illegal immigration or asylum seeking,
don't forget asylum seekers can't work, many of them could work and are able to work,
but they're not allowed to work, but let's just put them on one side.
Immigrants who are actually coming and working here, and they're paying taxes.
And the analysis I've seen suggests that, you know, the taxes that they pay more than offset,
any social costs that the immigrants themselves are imposing on the country.
And indeed, a wise government, when we talked earlier on about the impact of trade,
how there are winners and losers, a wise government could have taken some of those tax
receipts and provided compensation for the areas.
And this conversation in this case would have been building more schools,
building more hospitals, building more resources,
so that what's inverted commas come to be known as the native population
wouldn't feel they were being squeezed out in public services
by recently arrived migrants.
So it's yet another example of poor policy.
You could have taken the money raised by migrant taxes
and ease some of the pressures in the social sectors
and in the health sectors, but that wasn't done.
It was spent elsewhere.
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One other thing that is increasingly important is the relationship between the U.S. and the UK.
And I'd like to get your read on where things stand on the special relationship.
From what I've seen, the Prime Minister, Kirstama, has been somewhat deferential to the president compared to other.
the leaders. I'm wondering if you agree, and how is this relationship playing out right now?
I wouldn't use the word differential. I got to say the US is the largest, most important
country in the world, economically speaking. It's a close friend of ours, has been throughout
my lifetime. We fought world wars together, World War I, World War II, the deep ties in the
military, in the financial sector, in the service sectors, in the media. We talked about that
earlier on, are so very deep. I can't imagine them reversing. So it's very important, it seems to
me, that whoever is the Prime Minister of the UK has good and strong relationships with the
US President. And we can see that whether we go back to John of Kennedy, Harold and Harold
McMillan, Mrs Thatcher and Ronald Reagan, Tony Blair and George W. Bush, or Gordon Brown, and
Obama, and also David Cameron. It's one of the priorities of any UK leader is to continue to
foster good and strong links with the US. Now, President Trump is a particular character,
a very interesting character. We can talk about that.
if we need to but I think it was very important for us as a country to maintain those strong links
because of all the trading cultural connections that we have and for the prime minister our prime
ministers do that I think was very much the right thing for him to do to establish early and close ties
with him and to that extent one can only welcome his state visit this week to the country
because we're really paying respect to the post, not necessarily the man, the US president.
It's incredibly important that we have a relationship with him, maybe in the future with her,
all their advisors and the people that come with them.
There'll be a lot of connections being built this very week, mostly in Windsor.
That's mostly where the action is happening.
It's not happening in London, which I think was very wise.
and I hope from it both the US and the UK will benefit.
The UK will benefit from further exposure to the US
and hopefully President Trump and his entourage
will understand better why it's so important
that they continue to build good relationships with Europe,
with the UK inside it,
in the sense in which maybe to some extent we're learning
that you can't trust President Putin
to the extent to which we thought we could
and that both and as well China is another place
we're going to have to work on developing relations
but it's going to be a lot easier
if the US and Europe can go into those battles together
rather than excluding the US and Europe from each other
so hopefully it would lead to closer ties
not only between the US and the UK
but the US, the UK and the rest of Europe
which I think I think of with the democratic free world
and I think we have to show leadership and ownership
of the right way to do things
and I hope that somehow these relationships
that are being built this week
will foster those right way of doing things
I would rather be living in a democratic country
in Europe than anywhere else I could imagine
or the states of course
than anywhere else I could imagine in the world
and I think it's important that we recognize that commonality
I'm slightly surprised to hear your comments there
because, you know, what I would describe your characterization of the relationship is quite
cordial, respectful, and polite. And those are all words that I would use to describe the
U.S.'s relationship with the U.K. and with Europe for many years before 2025. But, you know,
from our vantage point, the way it appears is that Trump is essentially bullying
his allies into giving him what he wants. And in some cases, it's not actually even clear what he
wants. And in my view and in our view on this podcast, at least, mostly what he wants is to
be seen as the winner, to come out on top in some way. Even if it doesn't actually result
in a tangible benefit for the American people, what matters most is for a news outlet to say
Trump wins big, Trump crushes opponent, Europe concedes on tariffs, whatever the headline is, to make Trump appear as the winner. And so I'm slightly surprised to hear your read on the relationship, which sounds like, you know, he's an interesting character, but mostly what we care about is having a respectful relationship. And maybe that is the case. Maybe that is how people feel about it. But, you know,
your reactions to my reaction.
I was much more of that line earlier in the year when we had Liberation Day,
and that seemed to me to be ill-conceived.
And maybe I'm too much an optimist, but I think the administration has learned something from that
in how not to do things.
Liberation Day reminded me a little bit of the mini-budget in the UK.
I'm just going to go out and do this.
100%.
And realizing that it doesn't really work in terms of what happened to the dollar
and what happened to the standing of the US internationally.
I think I would hope that parts of the administration have learned lessons from that.
And also, if I could say, at the same time,
there's been a sense in which, I can't use my word carefully here,
a sense in which thinking that you could bring about a piece by negotiating with Putin
has turned out to be misconceived.
And I'm hoping that the administration has learned from that as well,
in a sense in which Putin is playing a,
a long game here.
He doesn't really want to give up bits of Ukraine
and to imagine that you could very quickly get him
to move away as proven to be wrong.
And I'm hoping there'll be some learning going on there as well.
And that's where I was going back to what
the Trump administration may learn from the UK.
Diplomacy and understanding international relations
is very much in the blood of European policy makers,
particularly in the UK.
All those years of empire that led to quite a bit of expertise in how to deal with overseas countries
and a lot of knowledge about the Soviets and Russia in general.
And I'm hoping that the special relationship can impart some knowledge as well back
in terms of how to deal with countries such as Russia
and how ultimately to bolster Ukraine rather than leaving it stranded.
Because there was a world in which we might have wanted to give Putin everything he wanted
and then declare that a peace in Ukraine.
But you will know, having grown up to some extent in Britain,
that we don't think appeasement is the way ahead in any of this.
Where's the next stop if we get of Ukraine?
You know, would they, I mean, I realize that Latvia is a member of NATO,
but you worry when you hear about skirmishes over Poland,
skirmishes over Latvia, the Finnish border as well,
being exposed to Russian troops, you know, there comes a point where you have to say,
no, we're not going to appease this guy, we're going to hold firm. And even if it means
having to commit troops and money, I think it's worth it. And I'm hoping that the US
administration will start to come to that point of view.
Jagjit Chada is a professor of economics at the University of Cambridge. He served as
director of the National Institute of Economic and Social Research from 2016 to 2024. He has acted as
specialist advisor to the House of Commons Treasury Committee and academic advisor to both the Bank
of England and HM Treasury. He is now on the advisory board of the Bennett Institute of Public
Policy, the executive board of the Productivity Institute and the Health Foundation's
Productivity Commission. He is also a founding fellow of the Royal Economic Society.
Jaggeet, this was a pleasure. Thank you so much for joining us.
It's been an absolute pleasure. Lovely talking to you. And I'll certainly continue to watch the show.
This episode was produced by Claire Miller and Alison Weiss and engineered by Benjamin Spencer.
Our research team is Dan Chalon, Isabel Kinsel, Kristen O'Donohue, and Mia Silverio.
Drew Burroughs is our technical director, and Catherine Dillon is our executive producer.
Thank you for listening to ProfG Markets from ProfG Media.
If you liked what you heard, give us a follow and join us for a fresh take on markets on Monday.
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