The headline is stark, almost jarring in its triumphalism. A VAT cut on theme parks and children’s meals has taken effect, and the government is already patting itself on the back. But let us pause, for a moment, to consider what this really means. We are not simply talking about a few pennies saved on a soggy burger or a discounted ride on a rollercoaster. We are witnessing a cultural shift, a deliberate reassertion of the family unit as the bedrock of national life. After decades of hectoring, of pitting individuals against one another in the name of progress, the state has finally remembered that people want to enjoy themselves, together.
This is not, as some sneer, a gimmick. It is a calculated economic stimulus. By making leisure more affordable, the government is encouraging spending in a sector that has been battered by inflation, by Brexit, by the lingering neurosis of pandemic lockdowns. Theme parks are not frivolous; they are engines of local employment, of small business supply chains, of the very joy that makes life worth living. And children’s meals? Let us not underestimate the symbolic power. A nation that makes it cheaper to feed its young is a nation that values its future.
Of course, the usual suspects will complain. The austerity-obsessed will mutter about fiscal prudence. The cultural killjoys will moan about hedonism. But they miss the point. The Fall of Rome was not caused by a tax break on chariot rides; it was caused by a loss of civic spirit, by a state that forgot how to please its people. This is not decadence; this is renewal. A happy populace is a productive populace. And if the price of that happiness is a slightly smaller government coffers, so be it.
I am reminded of the Victorian era, not for its sternness, but for its embrace of the day out. The seaside pier, the pleasure garden, the family excursion were not mere escapes from labour; they were rituals of social cohesion. They bound parents to children, workers to their own leisure, the nation to its own mythology. Modern British policy has too often been about atomisation, about isolating individuals in the cold efficiency of the market. This VAT cut is a small but significant reversal. It says: we want you to be together. We want you to laugh. We want you to spend your money here, in Britain, rather than hoarding it for some abstract future.
Critics will point out that the cut is temporary, that it is a pre-election bribe. But even a bribe can have noble consequences. If it makes a family of four stop and think, ‘Let’s go to Alton Towers instead of staring at screens,’ then the policy has justified itself. We live in an age of intellectual decadence, where we overthink every pleasure. We analyse, we moralise, we quantify. But some things are simply good. A day at the park, a hot meal with your children, the thrill of a ride: these are not luxuries to be taxed into oblivion. They are necessities of the soul.
So let the columnists sneer. Let the economists frown. I say bravo. This is a policy that understands that a nation is not a ledger, but a family writ large. And families need fun. They need memory. They need to be able to say, without irony, that the government has done something to make their lives a little brighter. If this is populism, then give me more of it. The alternative, a Grey Britain of nothing but work and worry, is no country for children, or for anyone with a pulse.
In the end, this is not about tax rates. It is about what we value. And today, we have declared that we value the simple, joyful act of being together. That is something worth celebrating, even if it costs the Exchequer a few quid. Rome fell because it forgot how to throw a good party. Britain will not make the same mistake.








