The Grey Men of Threadneedle Street have spoken. According to the whispers emanating from the Square Mile, three names have been placed on the shortlist for the next Chancellor of the Exchequer. The City, ever the pragmatist, is betting on a steady hand. But steady hands have guided us to this precipice before. The question is not who can manage the ledgers, but who can arrest the intellectual and moral decadence that has hollowed out our national purpose.
The first contender is the technocrat. A safe pair of hands, they say. Yet safe hands gave us the Great Moderation, which turned into the Great Financial Crisis. They gave us quantitative easing, which inflated asset prices while real wages stagnated. The technocrat believes in tweaking the dials of the economy, as if Britain were a machine that only needed recalibration. But Britain is not a machine; it is a civilisation in decline, and no amount of fiscal fine-tuning will restore its vigour.
The second is the populist, the man or woman of the people. They promise to tear down the establishment, to bring back the glory days of empire or the post-war consensus. But populism is a dangerous drug: it offers a brief high, then a crushing hangover. Look at the Truss experiment, which lasted barely longer than a lettuce. The populist confuses passion with policy, and the markets are merciless to those who mistake rhetoric for reality.
The third is the historian, the bearer of historical consciousness. This one understands that Britain’s decline mirrors the fall of Rome: an overextended empire, a loss of civic virtue, and a reliance on barbarian mercenaries (or in our case, cheap foreign labour and imported capital). This Chancellor would recognise that the fiscal crisis is actually a crisis of the soul. They would cut the bloated state, restore national self-respect, and invest not in white elephants but in the institutions that breed character: the family, the Church, the local community.
But do not hold your breath. The City wants a manager, not a reformer. It wants someone who can kick the can down the road, who can issue more gilts to the central bank, who can keep the wheels greased until the next crisis. The City is a machine that feeds on debt, and it will resist any chancellor who threatens to unplug it.
Yet the three contenders on this shortlist reveal something important: the old divisions of left and right are dead. The new divide is between those who believe Britain can be saved by tinkering and those who see the need for a radical reordering of our national life. The technocrat, the populist, the historian: each represents a different diagnosis of our malady. The technocrat sees a technical glitch. The populist sees a betrayal by elites. The historian sees a long moral decline that began when we lost faith in ourselves.
Who will be the next Chancellor? Probably the one who offends the fewest vested interests. But that is precisely the problem. The next Chancellor must be a breaker of idols, a surgeon of the state, a restorer of national confidence. Otherwise, we shall continue our slow slide into irrelevance, a museum of past glories, a pensioner nation living off borrowed time and borrowed money.
So let the City have its shortlist. But I, for one, would prefer a Chancellor who reads Gibbon rather than the Financial Times. One who knows that the fall of empires begins not with a budget deficit but with a deficit of will. The names on the shortlist are irrelevant; only the spirit behind the policies matters. And until that spirit changes, no chancellor, however competent, will save us from ourselves.









