Britain’s chance to be the global champion of free trade

Matt Ridley

UK to trigger Brexit 200 years after Ricardo’s comparative advantage My Times column on free trade after Brexit: The prime minister wants Britain to be “the most passionate, most consistent, most convincing advocate for free trade”. Under  either Donald Trump or Hillary Clinton, and with world trade stagnating, it looks as if the job is […]

Mental illness is the greatest research challenge

Matt Ridley

Infectious and heart disease are in retreat; cancer won’t go away My Times column on the Chan-Zuckerberg initiative in basic medical science:   Mark Zuckerberg, chief executive of Facebook, and his wife Priscilla Chan, a paediatrician, have announced their intention to spend $3 billion over ten years on medical research. Having met them last year, […]

Junk science on statins, snus and vaping

Matt Ridley

Evidence, not authority, is what should determine policy My Times column on statins, snus and vaping: One of the most salutary examples of people in authority getting risks wrong is a paper written in 1955 by the first head of the environmental cancer section of the US National Cancer Institute, Wilhelm Hueper. The title was […]

An ice-free Arctic Ocean has happened before

Matt Ridley

When the Arctic loses all its sea ice one summer, will it matter? My Times column on how the Arctic sea ice has melted in late summer before, between 10,000 and 6,000 years ago:   The sea ice in the Arctic Ocean is approaching its annual nadir. By early September each year about two thirds […]

Whatever happened to Adam Smith?

Matt Ridley

Economic libertarianism is no longer on offer to American voters My Times column on economic libertarianism:  Last week both Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump set out their economic policies in set-piece speeches. Mr Trump’s, delivered in Detroit, so far as one could tell from the fractured syntax and the digressions into invective, involves a trade […]

Innovation and its enemies

Matt Ridley

From coffee and printing to GMOs and shale gas, we’re too anti-new My Times column on the history of opposition to innovation:   The prime minister is to announce today that she would like to redirect some of the future profits of shale gas production to households, rather than councils. This is eminently sensible. It […]

Decarbonisation yes, but not at any price

Matt Ridley

Hinkley Point C and British renewables are too expensive This is my Times column on why we are paying too much to decarbonise via both nuclear and renewables, but I have expanded various points to give detailed quotes from sources to verify my arguments. [The expansions are in square brackets and italics.] If Hinkley Point […]

There are no experts on the future

Matt Ridley

The track record of forecasters, except through extrapolation, is poor My Times column on why experts get the future as wrong, or more so, than non-experts: Michael Gove was mocked during the referendum campaign for saying that “I think people in this country have had enough of experts.” Critics asked pointedly if he dismissed the […]

Industrial strategy can be regressive

Matt Ridley

Inequality is often worsened by government intervention My Times column on industrial strategy: In her first speech on the steps of 10 Downing Street Theresa May said that she intends to listen to those who “just about manage”, not to the wealthy and mighty. “When it comes to opportunity, we won’t entrench the advantages of the fortunate […]

Twitter and Facebook are tearing us apart

Matt Ridley

Social media’s echo chambers may do to society what radio once did   My Times column on the way social media polarises discourse and raises the political temperature:  Schisms of hatred seem to be fracturing the political landscape wherever you look right now: the police versus the black community in America, Sunni v Shia, Wahhabism […]

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