Luca Calafati, Julie Froud, Colin Haslam, Sukhdev Johal and Karel Williams are researchers in Foundational Economy Research Limited: foundationaleconomyresearch.com
'Commentators, politicians and economists now suddenly agree: Britain isn't working. Yet their suggested fixes usually fall laughably short. Not this book. Its authors have been warning of the brokenness of Britain's politics and economics and business for years, and here they deliver a devastating diagnosis. From how thousands of pounds have been taken from your pay to the nonsense of Westminster's fixation on growth - it's all here, along with practical suggestions of how to use our political system to deliver improvements. Read this and you won't look at a front page the same way again.' Aditya Chakrabortty, The Guardian 'A brilliant book making hope realisable, outlining the passion that is needed.' Danny Dorling, Oxford University 'What if progressive politics are trapped in a no-win game, where growth and rising wages become impossible? From this bleak starting point, the authors map out strategies to deliver redistribution and social justice by focusing on the most basic question: what can be done - by people, households and communities - to improve the quality of life around them.' Paul Mason, author of Postcapitalism 'Economic failure, elite myopia and outdated methodologies and policies have mitigated against any chance of attaining foundational liveability for the UK. This clever book uses meticulous argument and new thinking to make households the focus of a renewed placed based analysis that shifts the terrain of how we might address our economic woes. Social infrastructure, essential services and higher residual incomes boost quality of life for ordinary households; clear sighted ideas around starter polices and social innovations describe how this could happen. This is a set of visionary proposals from a group of people who actually know what they are talking about! Everyone should be reading it, and most especially our MPs.' Henrietta Moore, Institute of Global Prosperity, UCL 'When nothing works is a radical, searching critique of the political consensus that has led us to our current economic impasse. It puts on the agenda a new politics squarely focused on raising the living standards of middle and low income households by improving essential public services, expanding free social spaces, and increasing disposable incomes. It is a hugely stimulating book that should be required reading for anyone interested in charting a way out of the economic turmoil of the past few years.' Ben Jackson, Oxford University and co-editor of Political Quarterly 'An intriguing search for a down-to-earth, bottom-up alternative to centralized technocracy controlling and failing in the production and delivery of public goods and services to ordinary people. The book outlines novel arrangements combining representation and self-government, building innovation on adapting extant public institutions and engaging social movements in the local production of collective well-being. Essential reading for the impending post-neoliberal reinvention of democracy and the state.' Wolfgang Streeck, Max Planck Institute 'How could we think anew about the deep economic challenges we face? Focusing on the very real challenges of British households this rich and fascinating book uses empirical data to ask new questions about our current reality and points to practical ways we could create a liveable economy - one in which every household could thrive within the boundaries our ecosystems can support.' Hilary Cottam, author of Radical Help 'When nothing works eviscerates the focus of elite policy makers, with chart after chart exposing the long, slow decline of liveability in a majority of UK households. As neoliberalism unravels, and its attendant ecological crises impose new ways of life on humanity, this book's plea for a shift in focus to liveability is timely, important and pragmatic. The focus of economic policy henceforth must be on how to sustain and improve household and neighbourhood liveability as we walk the cotton-thread-thin environmental pathway we have left ourselves.' Andrew Pendleton, Global Action Plan -- .