Rachel Reeves: The Iron Chancellor? (Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

Last month, shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves travelled to the United States to present Labour’s new economic policy strategy, dubbed “securonomics”. If you think it’s strange for a party to unveil its economic manifesto in front of a foreign audience rather than its actual electorate, that’s because it is. The opposite scenario — an American leader travelling to Britain to present their campaign platform — would be inconceivable. Indeed, it is hard to imagine a more revealing example of what Perry Anderson called the British political class’s “hyper-subalternity to the US”. If there is anything special about UK-US relations, it is the former’s inability to overcome its inferiority complex in the face of America’s global decline.
It soon transpired, however, that there was another reason for Reeves’s trip to the US: she was there to stress that securonomics is simply the British equivalent of “Bidenomics” — America’s new economic paradigm, which was recently outlined in a speech by National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan. On that occasion, Sullivan acknowledged that the old Washington Consensus — founded upon the embrace of privatisation, deregulation and hyper-globalisation — has failed. It has, he intimated, laid waste to America’s working and middle classes, hollowed out its industrial base and infrastructure, and made the country overdependent on imports for the supply of everything from energy to food to basic medical supplies. The same, of course, can be said for most Western nations.
In place of this failed programme, Sullivan proposed a “new” Washington Consensus, based on a more protectionist state promoting techno-industrial resilience and self-sufficiency, as well as winding down far-flung supply chains. To this end, the Biden administration has passed several bills, including the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, the Chips & Science Act, and, most notably, the Inflation Reduction Act, which, together, have introduced around $2 trillion in new federal spending over the next 10 years.
Clearly, there is a strong geopolitical dimension to America’s embrace of deglobalisation. It is not just about making America stronger; it is also, and perhaps even more importantly, about weakening China. At its heart, this strategy may even be seen as a way of reinforcing the American economy in anticipation of a future conflict with Beijing. In this context, as much as US leaders might deny it, America has little need for resourceless trading partners such as the UK, if not as purchasers of its goods.
If anything, they are increasingly seen as competitors and rivals, or at best as military allies (with the UK in a subordinate position to the US, of course). Indeed, Reeves herself noted the conspicuous absence of Britain from Sullivan’s speech: “In his recent remarks, the US National Security Advisor mentioned a number of international partners… One country — to me at least — was notable by its absence: Britain.” So much for the “special relationship”.
This makes Reeves’s attempt to win over the US administration by parroting Bidenomics all the more pitiful. It doesn’t just reflect a profound lack of imagination — though this is nothing new; the UK has always fashioned its economic policy based on whatever happened to be the dominant paradigm on the other side of the Atlantic — but also a delusional misunderstanding of the changing nature of UK-US relations. At least the current Tory Government seems to understand that Joe Biden is engaged in a “distortive global subsidy race” aimed at encouraging companies to shift investments from Europe to the US and incentivising customers to “Buy American”. Moreover, to the extent that European nations are able to secure some of Biden’s federal subsidies for their own industries — as Sunak hopes to do with the signing of the recent “Atlantic declaration” with the US — this entails full adherence to America’s confrontational national security strategy vis-à-vis China, despite Europe’s economically interdependent relationship with the country.
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