The next leader of the Labour Party and Prime Minister, the former Manchester mayor Andy Burnham, appears to be advancing a project with more substantive content than that of his predecessor, Keir Starmer. Some commentators have characterised his programme as "business-friendly socialism."
The coherence of this expression depends on what we understand by "business-friendly" and by "socialism." If by business-friendly we mean deference to capital and collusion with business owners, and by socialism we mean an economic system in which capital is owned and controlled not by a minority but by society—whether in a decentralised form or through the state—then "business-friendly socialism" is an oxymoron.
Those around Burnham, however, argue that public ownership or control of essential services—such as utilities and housing—can provide a degree of economic and social stability that ultimately benefits private businesses operating in other sectors. Yet what is meant by government control remains vague. For example, The Productive State, a report published by a think tank close to Burnham, includes a chapter entitled "Beyond Nationalisation: An Ecosystem of Democratic Ownership."
This debate takes place in the context of the failure of the privatisation-with-regulation model designed by Margaret Thatcher and maintained by John Major and Tony Blair. In sectors where competition is difficult or impossible to introduce—unlike telecommunications—that model has largely failed to deliver. At the same time, returning to the previous model of state ownership is neither straightforward nor necessarily desirable, as the transition would be highly complex and both technology and society have changed profoundly. What is needed is a new institutional model, one that looks to the future rather than relying on rhetoric, political expediency, or collusion with selected business interests. Burnham's first leadership campaign speech, however, remained vague on these questions and instead focused on devolution and decentralisation.
On the meaning of the word socialism, Paul Krugman has argued that, at least in the United States, the term often refers to little more than support for the kinds of social democratic policies long associated with Europe. He is largely correct. However, I believe that many of today's progressive leaders are also emphasising a stronger element of collective supply-side policies. Although such policies already exist—for example, in Germany's and Sweden's systems of workplace democracy or Austria's tradition of public housing—they have generally played a secondary role within the traditional welfare-state model of social democracy.
In any case, there is nothing especially radical about these policies. While many in Europe lament the decline of social democracy, something remarkably similar to it—albeit labelled "socialism"—appears to be gaining ground in the United States. The concern expressed by The Wall Street Journal and The Economist over the rise of Gen Z socialist voters is evidence both of the significance of this development and of the fear-based narrative they promote—"Marxism is coming"—to alarm moderate voters. They would be better advised to worry about the genuinely radical and authoritarian tendencies of Trump 2.0.
From my vantage point abroad, Zohran Mamdani, Lina Khan, Bernie Sanders, and Elizabeth Warren are democratic socialists or social democrats who happen to be more politically successful than many of their European counterparts. There are probably good reasons for this, including the fact that Europe's incomplete political and fiscal integration leaves national progressive governments with insufficient fiscal space to pursue ambitious policies.
Initiatives such as the recent Global Progressive Mobilization should encourage a convergence of progressive forces, from the London Consensus to Mamdani. That convergence should work towards a new model of business based on an alliance between democratic socialists and responsible capitalists: empowering workers, democratising investment funds, developing sovereign wealth funds, and pursuing sound industrial and housing policies.
