It is a peculiar irony that the man who once sold us instant coffee now embodies Britain’s most valuable intangible export. Anthony Head, the actor whose career arc stretches from the frothy lattes of 1980s Nescafe adverts to the folksy wisdom of Ted Lasso, has become a living ledger of the UK’s creative balance sheet. His trajectory mirrors a nation that has capitalised on soft power while its industrial base has crumbled. And the numbers, as they say, do not lie.
The creative industries contributed £126 billion to the UK economy last year, a figure that glitters like a gilt-edged bond in a low-yield world. But let us not get sentimental. This is not a story about art; it is about returns. The Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport reports that creative exports grew by 11% in 2023, outperforming financial services for the first time in a decade. When the City stumbles, the stage pays the dividend.
Head’s own portfolio is a study in diversification. From the camp horror of Buffy the Vampire Slayer to the paternal warmth of Ted Lasso, he has monetised the very qualities that make British culture a hedge against global volatility: irony, restraint, and a deep well of character acting. The British Council’s latest survey shows that ‘Britishness’ remains a premium brand abroad, with trust ratings higher than our diplomatic corps. Soft power, unlike hard power, does not require aircraft carriers. It requires a decent script and a pensionable face.
Yet here is the rub: the government’s cultural budget is being slashed by 11% in real terms. The Arts Council England faces a 17% reduction in funding. It is fiscal madness. While the Treasury chases productivity gains in factories that no longer exist, it starves the sector generating the highest export multiplier. Each pound invested in UK film and television returns £3.20, according to the British Film Institute. That is a better yield than most FTSE 100 companies.
The market has already voted. Netflix and Apple TV+ spent over £5 billion on UK content last year, lured by our tax reliefs and deep bench of talent. This is capital flight in reverse: inward investment fleeing Hollywood’s overheads for Britain’s cost-effective creativity. But this advantage is not guaranteed. If the Chancellor persists in treating the arts as a discretionary luxury rather than a strategic asset, the talent will decamp to cheaper stages in Canada or New Zealand.
Head’s own journey illustrates the cycle. He cut his teeth in regional theatre, then leveraged a niche role into transatlantic stardom. That pipeline is now at risk. Drama school closures, rising audition costs, and the concentration of production in London are narrowing the funnel. Soft power requires depth; depth requires subsidy. It is as simple as supply and demand.
Let us also consider the brand premium. When Ted Lasso became a global phenomenon, it single-handedly boosted searches for UK education and tourism. The British Universities and Colleges Admissions Service reported a 14% spike in US applications after the show’s first season. This is advertising you cannot buy. And who pays for it? The taxpayer, through the BBC and tax reliefs. It is a classic externality: the private sector profits from public investment.
Of course, my colleagues on the economics desk will argue that culture is a luxury good. They will point to the national debt and demand cuts. But they fail to grasp the leverage. For every £1 of public money spent on the arts, the Treasury recoups £5 in tax and national insurance contributions. The creative sector is a high-beta asset: volatile, but with outsized returns. In a world of secular stagnation, we cannot afford to shed our winners.
Anthony Head is not just a thespian; he is a bellwether. His career tells us that British creativity is a long-dated asset with a strong track record. But like any asset, it requires maintenance. If the government continues to treat arts funding as a discretionary cost rather than a capital investment, we will see a depreciation in our soft power. And that is a balance sheet no amount of austerity can repair.
The Bottom Line: Protect the creative dividend. It is paying our bills.









