The Only Way Is Up: How to Take Britain from Austerity to Prosperity
By (Author) Polly Toynbee
By (author) David Walker
Atlantic Books
Atlantic Books
3rd December 2024
11th July 2024
Main
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Corruption in politics, government and society
320.941
Paperback
288
Width 135mm, Height 216mm, Spine 23mm
300g
It's only when your feet touch the bottom of the swamp that you can push up to the surface. By 2030 the UK could be so much better, so much more productive, fairer, cleaner, greener, healthier and more contented. Keep this book to benchmark the country's progress on that pathway. Yes, it's a steep gradient, but the only way is up.Political change is coming. But the new Westminster government's inheritance looks grim. We're all in it together, the Tories used to say. But they look set to bequeath sharp social divisions, vastly increased inequality, a stagnant economy and unfulfilled commitments on climate change - and all this at a time of unprecedented international tension. The Only Way is Up gives us a ready reckoner on how to repair the damage and set the UK on the path to sustainable growth. Combining the latest data with expert analysis across health, children's services, the economy, environment, policing and defence, Polly Toynbee and David Walker tell the story of what went wrong during the Tories' wild ride and what must now be remedied.
From dentistry to sweatshops, from the gig economy to childcare, the darker corners of the criminal justice system to the lives of the richest, this is an essential and impassioned account of where Britain had arrived by the election. Keir Starmer says he will have "a mountain to climb"; this is a minutely researched guide to just how jagged and unforgiving the path will be -- Andrew Marr
A stirring analysis of the dubious causes and harsh consequences of austerity Britain revisited -- David Kynaston on CAMERON'S COUP
Toynbee and Walker at their forensic, polemical best -- Will Hutton on CAMERON'S COUP
Polly Toynbee and David Walker are co-authors of The Verdict and The Lost Decade. Polly is a columnist for the Guardian and her latest book is An Uneasy Inheritance. David Walker is a former director of the Audit Commission.