Let us dispense with the consoling fiction that Britain’s 0.3 per cent contraction is merely a ‘blip’. It is a symptom – a small, telling symptom – of a deeper rot. The recession, triggered by war with Iran, is not an economic accident but a consequence of a political class that has forgotten the first rule of statecraft: know thy limits. We have blundered into a conflict thousands of miles away, and now the piper must be paid.
History offers an unkind mirror. Compare this moment to the Suez Crisis of 1956, when a foolish military adventure exposed Britain’s diminished standing and triggered a currency crisis. Then, as now, the nation learned that imperial pretensions do not pay the bills. The 0.3 per cent figure might seem small, but it is a canary in the coal mine of national decline.
Today’s elites, busily congratulating themselves on their ‘moral foreign policy’, have forgotten that trade flows through peaceful channels, not through bombed-out ports. The cost of this war will be felt in every household: higher prices, subdued wages, a creeping sense that the country is no longer master of its own fate. It is a lesson the Victorians understood well: they built an empire on commerce, not on quixotic crusades.
The real scandal is not the recession itself, but the intellectual decadence that led us here. Our leaders, puffed up with utopian zeal, imagined they could reshape the Middle East without consequence. They have instead reshaped the British economy into something smaller, poorer, and more anxious. If we are to recover, we must first abandon the delusion that we are still a great power with a global mission. We are a medium-sized island with a proud history, not a Roman republic forever at war. Until we learn that, the 0.3 per cent contraction will be but the first of many such humiliations.








