London’s resilience is a lesson to policymakers everywhere
The virtues of services, scale and immigration are on full display
In 2012 London could claim to be the world’s pre-eminent city. The Olympics had given it a showcase. Despite the financial crisis, globalisation was still just about in vogue and cosmopolitan London was its emblem. Since then, it has been hit by a series of blows. Brexit signalled that Britain was turning inwards and made its capital a less attractive place for businesses. Covid-19 raised big questions for cities everywhere; workers in central London are in the office on average for just 2.3 days per week. Over the past decade some of the most powerful currents in Western politics—anti-globalisation, fear of immigration, the fetishisation of manufacturing—have turned against London.
Explore more
This article appeared in the Leaders section of the print edition under the headline “Metropolished”
Leaders December 16th 2023
- Rishi Sunak’s strategic genius
- Can you have a healthy democracy without a common set of facts?
- Iran’s regime is weaker than it looks, and therefore more pliable
- The Fed gives in to the clamour for looser money
- London’s resilience is a lesson to policymakers everywhere
- In a first, COP28 targets the root cause of climate change
Discover more
How to make a success of peace talks with Vladimir Putin
The key is robust security guarantees for Ukrainians
Javier Milei: “My contempt for the state is infinite”
Argentina’s president is idolised by the Trumpian right. They should get to know him better
Donald Trump’s threats of tariffs will do harm, even if he does not impose them
The risk of a trade war is uncomfortably high
Peace in Lebanon is just a start
Donald Trump must build on Joe Biden’s belated success
From Nixon to China, to Trump to Tehran
Iran is weak. For America’s next president that creates an opportunity
Too many master’s courses are expensive and flaky
Governments should help postgraduates get a better deal