Since the 1970s, the view has been put forward that the state is inefficient, obstructive, or powerless. This view is an ideological smokescreen endorsed by people who recognise the state’s power, and want to control it for their own interests.
In fact, the modern state, appropriately plural and democratically accountable, is a very effective institution, the only kind of institution that can underpin the social order and ensure a fair distribution of resources. Political parties have banked on the idea that growing the size of the gross national product will increase wellbeing for everyone, through trickle down, even if inequality grows and communities are destroyed.
The unsustainability and failure of this idea is evident. The state is having to mitigate an ever-larger accumulation of downstream social and health problems that this approach has generated.
Recommendations
We outline five principles against which a reformed state should assess every potential policy:
Will it enhance equality?
Will it promote freedom from domination?
Will it tackle the social determinants of ill health?