Tuesday, 26 January 2016

Labour seeks a 'smart State' route to voters' hearts


By Paul Coleman


Professor Mariana Mazzacuto, with Shadow Chancellor John McDonnell (© Paul Coleman, 2016)
Humiliated at the 2015 General Election, how does an opposition party seek a viable new economic policy?
A clue emerges on a rainy night in central London’s Mayfair (Tuesday, 26 January). The steeply banked seats of the Royal Institution's atmospheric Faraday Theatre are almost full.  An audience of about 300 people glare down at the speakers' lectern.  
This famous science amphitheatre is named after south London-born scientist Michael Faraday (1791-1867). Faraday's discovery of electromagnetic induction helped to - pardon-the-pun - transform electricity into a powerful technology.

Scribbles
Jeremy Corbyn, leader of the UK's main opposition Labour Party, doesn't look particularly electrified. A casually dressed Corbyn looks comfortable to simply be a member of tonight's audience. Corbyn allows his colleague, Shadow Chancellor John McDonnell, to enthusiastically introduce Mariana Mazzacuto, Professor of Innovative Economics at the University of Sussex.
As Professor Mazzacuto speaks, Corbyn starts to scribble notes into a small notepad - and finds he needs to write quickly.
"I know I talk way too much and too fast," says Mazzacuto, after a breathless 15-minute prelude to the core of her main argument. "It's because I'm an Italian from New York."

Successful
Mazzacuto tries to debunk 40 years of perceived wisdom. She rejects the "cartoon image" of the State as "a necessary but boring, lethargic, bureaucratic and inert dinosaur" - and dismisses the idea that only businesses can be "dynamic, creative and able to think out of the box".
Mazzacuto contends that, far from being a "free market paradise", the United States is in fact a successful "entrepreneurial state" with an interventionist public sector that has invested billions of dollars in shaping economic innovation and growth

Smart
For instance, she reminds the audience that a nascent Apple received loans from the US government in 1978. 
The US Defense (sic) Department created the Internet.
Global Positioning Satellites began as a US military project.
A publicly funded professor at Delaware University "made our smart phones smart and not stupid" by creating touchscreen technology.
'Siri', the iPhone voice-recognition tool, started as a US state-led artificial intelligence programme.
"No private companies were trying to put a man on the Moon when NASA undertook the Apollo project," adds Mazzacuto.

Create
Professor Mazzacuto acknowledges that Apple's Steve Jobs and other entrepreneurs of his ilk brilliantly harnessed these technologies. But her point is that publicly-funded, State-led research and development fuelled these beneficial developments - and others more recently in clean energy, biotechnology and nanotechnology.
Historically, says Mazzacuto, the State in countries like the United States and China does  "create markets". 
But since the financial meltdown of 2007-09, State-led research and development has diminished. Politicians target public sector debt, even though careless private sector greed caused the meltdown and taxpayers resuscitated private banks.
Mazzacuto argues the State should act like venture capitalists again, investing long-term in cutting edge industries and companies.
"We need a tense, symbiotic public-private eco-system," says Mazzacuto. "We need growth that is smart and innovation-led. We want growth that is inclusive and sustainable - that produces less and not more inequality."

Signpost
Is Mazzacuto's position a signpost to Labour's own deal? To a 'smart State' economic policy direction that a Corbyn/McDonnell Labour Party might take?
Mazzacuto's lecture is the first in a year-long series of Labour's nationwide ‘New Economics’ seminars that McDonnell says will "raise the level of discussion about our economy". 
The seminars follow on from Labour setting up an economics advisory council peopled, says McDonnell, by "some of the globe's most prominent economists", including Mazzacuto.
McDonnell also promises a 'State of the Economy' summit next May.

Mariana Mazzacuto is Professor of the Economics of Innovation in the Science Policy Unit at the University of Sussex. She is the author of The Entrepreneurial State: Debunking Public vs. Private Sector Myths, (Anthem Press, London, 2015). 
Mazzacuto lectured an audience attending 'Economic Policy: from market fixing to market shaping and creating', hosted at the Faraday Theatre at the Royal Institution, Albemarle Street, London W1, on 26 January 2016.

© Paul Coleman, London Intelligence, January 2016

Friday, 4 December 2015

Changing London: Tottenham Court Road


New 'South Plaza' portal at Tottenham Court Road © Transport for London

New information technology and social media has 'monetarised our private lives', according to Jerry Harris' engaging thought-piece on 'Transnational Capital and the Technology of Domination and Desire'.
Hmmm...maybe...but mobile devices and social media also often sorely test my skills as a professional London pedestrian.
You've probably encountered this too.
People who don't look where they're walking as they assume their mobile phone miraculously deploys a new-fangled PNA - or Pedestrian Navigation App.

Rapid change
Totally encapsulated in their device bubble, they also might be missing out on London's ongoing rapid change.
Today, for example, the newly opened 'South Plaza' egress from an ever-changing Tottenham Court Road station escalates me from the bowels of the Northern Line tube onto Charing Cross Road.
The new entrance, garlanded by French artist Daniel Buren's colourful artworks, forms part of Transport for London's £500 million transformation of Tottenham Court Road station that serves the Northern and Central tube lines.

Centre Point
Look up from the escalators through a 15-metre high glass canopy and you'll see London's 34-storey Centre Point tower, rising 117 metres from the junction where the eastern end of Oxford Street meets the southern tip of Tottenham Court Road.
Completed in 1966, property tycoon Harry Hyam's Grade II-listed Centre Point stands completely cloaked.
The tower is undergoing its own transformation from a dowdy 20th Century office block into a new plaza with piazza, 82 apartments, 13 so-called 'affordable' homes, a pool, spa and, of course, a ubiquitous new set of chain shops for London.

Demolition
The old station ticket hall that fused confused tourists and harassed London commuters in one cramped scrum is now replaced by a space probably large enough to swing five cats.
TfL say around 150,000 people use Tottenham Court Road station daily. This will rise to 200,000 when TfL-run Crossrail services call at Tottenham Court from 2018.
But Crossrail - London's new east-west London railway - and Tottenham Court Road's 'over-station development' hasn't pleased everyone. 
Controversially, it involved the demolition of buildings, businesses and ways of life for people on Dean Street, Diadem Court, Great Chapel Street and Oxford Street itself.

Dogs
Some things don't change though.
'Dogs must be carried', barks the sign at the top and bottom of an escalator.
Darn, I brought my mobile phone but keep forgetting to bring a dog.


© Paul Coleman, London Intelligence, December 2015

Sunday, 13 September 2015

Labour Party's new leader: Jeremy Corbyn

A suited Jeremy Corbyn in Westminster © Paul Coleman, London Intelligence 2015
 
"The Labour Party is now a threat to our national security, our economic security and your family's security," says Prime Minister David Cameron, speaking about the election of Jeremy Corbyn as Labour's new leader.
BBC Breakfast also hosted a debate about whether Corbyn's casual clothes constitute a threat to our nation's fashion industry.
Yet, as the photo shows, Corbyn can cut a dash in a dark suit (centre).

Corbyn was photographed outside St Margaret's Church in Parliament Square on 27 March, 2014, attending the funeral of veteran Labour politician Tony Benn.
(Benn passed away on 14 March 2014).
At that time, the idea that Corbyn would be elected as Labour's new leader would probably have seemed far-fetched.

Click on image to enlarge.
 
© Paul Coleman, London Intelligence, September 2015