Steve Richards: What the Germans can teach us
For Blue Labour Germany is the model with its collaborative labour policies, vocational education and regional banks
Latest in Steve Richards
Opinion blogs
The Iraq Canard
The anti-war Blair rage is subsiding. The proof is that Lord Sumption’s lecture at the London ...
Victory over the “foreign court”
Jack Straw and David Davis have a joint article in the Telegraph today, urging the Government to ign...
Why do some men consider the street as a female meat market?
Pronouncements on sexual inequality in the UK are normally met with an eye roll by my generation. As...
Related articles
I cannot escape from Germany. In recent days it has become a recurring theme. Wherever I have turned, waiting for a train, reading my emails, finding out more about the group inside the Labour party known as Blue Labour, wondering about Greece, the focus has turned to Germany.
To begin with the most trivial episode, on Monday night I was with a friend who had reported on the World Cup in Germany in 2006. We were waiting for a train to take us a few miles from one part of north London to another. There were no trains. No one seemed to know why. Perhaps it was something to do with the hot weather. As we waited, the sports journalist began to question whether our rotten, fragmented, wastefully expensive transport system would be able to cope with the Olympics next summer, a concern of voters too according to a poll in Tuesday's Evening Standard.
They have cause for concern. The various private companies with their monopoly services are accountable to their shareholders and have little need to worry about the travellers who have no alternative forms of transport. Network Rail is a most bizarre organisations in its blurred accountability, not quite public and not quite private either. As we speculated about the Olympics, I spoke of a blog by the transport specialist Christian Wolmar (which I recommend to anyone remotely interested in Britain's transport system). Earlier this week he chronicled what really happened to the recent McNulty Report on the future of the railways, a deeply depressing account of complacent, chaotic muddle and an almost resolute determination, at some levels, that nothing much should arise from the review.
My friend compared the situation here with Germany during the World Cup where, to his amazement, trains ran on time, regularly, cheaply and with much additional transport laid on to coincide with the end of games. British journalists and fans, at that time still reading in the UK endless eulogies about the Anglo-American economic model, were taken aback to find that quality of life was higher in Germany.
We gave up waiting for the train. The following day my column appeared in The Independent arguing that pension reform in the public sector was needed and that the strikers had a poor case. That is still my view, but amidst the informed emails that highlighted how nuanced the issue was, one from an English reader living in Germany caught my particular attention. He wrote to remind me that in Germany "companies have to have workers' councils by law. In practice, this means unions are integrated into strategic management decisions. For example, instead of laying off skilled workers in time of recession, they reduce hours and increase them again when things pick up, an initiative from unions in one company I am researching.
"The thing that really surprised me was how Keynesian theory is enshrined into the constitution. The CDU/CSU actually have in their parties' constitution a commitment to maintaining social welfare. In the UK Keynesianism is seen as being 'far left' by much of our media. Here it is working, and is pretty well law.
"I read UK newspapers alongside a range in Germany. I have to say that the breadth of debate in the UK is incredibly narrow, and I feel very frustrated by this. Having taught in UK schools for more than 30 years, I was always amazed that politics is often not taught at all. In Germany, politics is a compulsory part of the curriculum. The average German is able to use political vocabulary in day-to-day discussions."
Perhaps this is a romanticised view of the country currently at the centre of the euro storm, and which has not always displayed firm navigation. Yet compare Germany powering away into significant growth with the UK's economy hardly growing at all. This is no time for British disdain. Indeed the patronising lectures delivered to the Germans and French in the late 1990s by Tony Blair and Gordon Brown on the virtues of the British model seem even more preposterously patronising now than they did at the time.
On the same day as I received that email, I heard from some of those associated with Blue Labour, a phenomenon I had viewed with instinctive suspicion, without knowing very much about it. They are highly critical of the Blair/Brown economic policy. When asked for an alternative closer to their way of thinking, they reply without hesitation: Germany. Blue Labour (a poor, misleading title) is not old Labour, nor is it a homage to David Cameron's "Big Society". To some extent, Germany is the model, with its collaborative industrial policies, focus on vocational education and regional banks more responsive to the needs of local business. Blue Labour is strongly in favour of policies that lead to a more vibrant private sector, but is scathing about the UK's dependency on the performance of the banks.
Blue Labour's analysis is much more interesting than I expected and leads to specific policy recommendations, always a test for fashionable concepts. It also provides a coherent analysis of New Labour's failings under both Blair and Brown. Blairites/Brownites and those around David Cameron often turned to the US for inspiration. Blue Labour's greater interest in Germany perhaps will drive the political agenda away from a simplistic focus on one type of market-based reforms, as if no others exist. There are many unanswered questions, but I suspect there is more to Blue Labour than meets the eye.
Of course in parts of the EU Germany is seen as an overwhelming problem, and the recent crises have led to introspective angst in Germany, too. British ministers in the last government were frustrated at Angela Merkel's slow response to the 2008 financial crisis, a frustration echoed now in the EU as she responds, at times tentatively, to the drama in Greece.
Last November, Merkel delivered a speech in Bruges, seen by some pro-Europeans as being as significant as the hostile words delivered by Margaret Thatcher in the late 1980s in the same location and on a partially similar theme: the need for consensus to emerge from the aspirations of individual countries rather than an assumption that there is a European consensus to which members will sign up. More immediately, Germany's booming exports and neurotically careful domestic spending do not help other exporters yearning for more buoyant markets. Germany is no idyll.
But at a time when yet another government here argues there is only one approach to "reform" and when some Conservatives ache to stand back from Europe and Greece, as if we will not suffer from the consequences of an economic collapse, there are lessons. Two defining slogans in the UK over the last 40 years have distorted everything. Margaret Thatcher declared, "There is no alternative". And both Tony Blair and David Cameron argue that the pivotal divide is between reformers and anti-reformers.
But there is an alternative. There is more than one reform. There is no escape from Germany.
- 1 Robert Fisk: The going price of getting away with murder... would $33m be enough?
- 2 Ian Birrell: Geldof's obsession with aid hurt Africa. But now trade is healing the scars
- 3 Hardeep Singh Kohli: For me, it is all about 'Gregory's Girl', a record of first love
- 4 DJ Taylor: How to spot a leftie – an idiot's guide
- 5 Patrick Cockburn: I fear this terrible massacre will be the beginning of a long civil war in Syria
- 6 Leading article: Ten questions for Jeremy Hunt
- 7 The Daily Cartoon
- 8 Dita Von Teese: What's underneath all that corsetry and red lipstick?
- 9 Leading article: Questions for Mr Blair to address
- 10 Leading article: Russia must act now to halt Assad's slaughter
- 1 Robert Fisk: The going price of getting away with murder... would $33m be enough?
- 2 Brazil rocked by abortion for 9-year-old rape victim
- 3 Hardcore, hard-wired: How the prevalence of porn is changing our everyday lives
- 4 Principled Skinner rises above the fray
- 5 Fat? Really? Olympic hope laughs off official’s jibe – but others aren’t amused
- 6 News International 'tried to blackmail select committee'
- 7 'Hello mum, this is going to be hard for you to read ...'
- 8 Postgraduate students are being used as 'slave labour'
- 9 Coke reveals its secret: It may need to carry a cancer warning
- 10 French in uproar over oral sex anti-smoking posters
Experience the Heineken Hub
Get free wi-fi and exclusive i content while you enjoy a tasty pint of Heineken at participating pubs.
Can you imagine a career in teaching?
Be inspired to teach - let real teachers show you how rewarding the job can be.
Playing a game-changing role during the Games
Cisco is providing the solutions for London 2012's complex IT needs.
Enter the latest Independent competitions
Win anything from gadgets to five-star holidays on our competitions and offers page.
Business videos from commercial thought leaders
Watch the best in the business world give their insights into the world of business.
Career Services
The secret life of the red carpet
Up and away – how '7 Up' went global



Comments