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Institute of Economic Affairs
Free-market think tank From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Institute of Economic Affairs (IEA) is a British right-wing free market think tank,[7] which is registered as a charity.[8] Associated with the New Right,[5][6] the IEA says that it seeks to "further the dissemination of free-market thinking" by "analysing and expounding the role of markets in solving economic and social problems".[9][10]
The IEA subscribes to a neoliberal world view and advocates positions based on this ideology.[11] It published climate change denial material between 1994 and 2007.[12] It has advocated for privatisation of, and abolition of complete government control of, the National Health Service (NHS), in favour of a healthcare system with market mechanisms.[13][4] The IEA is headquartered in Westminster, London.[14][12]
Founded by businessman Antony Fisher in 1955,[15] the IEA was one of the first modern think tanks,[16] and promoted Thatcherite ideology, and free market and monetarist economic policies.[17] The IEA has been criticised for operating in a manner closer to that of a lobbying operation than as a genuine think tank, [18] and for receiving some funding from tobacco companies whilst campaigning on tobacco industry issues.
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History
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In 1945 Antony Fisher read an article in Reader's Digest by Friedrich Hayek that summarised Hayek's work The Road to Serfdom.[19][16] Later that year, Fisher visited Hayek at the London School of Economics. Hayek dissuaded Fisher from embarking on a political and parliamentary career to try to prevent the spread of socialism and central planning.[19] Instead, Hayek suggested the establishment of a body that could engage in research and reach the intellectuals with reasoned argument,[19] saying that a think tank would have far more "decisive influence in the great battle of ideas".[20] Set up by Fisher and Oliver Smedley,[21] the IEA was thus founded after Hayek had suggested that an intellectual counterweight through think tanks was necessary to combat the prevailing post-war consensus around Keynesianism and the Butskellism of Rab Butler and Hugh Gaitskell. Fisher, Smedley, and others were successful in building the IEA and its affiliates of Atlas Network into a bastion of free-market economics and neoliberalism,[20] which supplanted the post-war Keynesian paradigm.[22][23][24]
The IEA's first location was a cramped, £3-a-week room with one table and chair at Oliver Smedley's General Management Services, which housed various free-trade organisations at 4 Austin Friars, a few dozen yards from the Stock Exchange in the heart of the City of London.[25] In June 1955, The Free Convertibility of Sterling by George Winder was published, with Fisher signing the foreword as Director of the IEA.[19] In November 1955 the IEA's Original Trust Deed was signed by Fisher, Smedley, and John Harding. Ralph Harris (later Lord Harris) began work as part-time General Director in January 1957.[19] He was joined in 1958 by Arthur Seldon who was initially appointed Editorial Advisor and became the editorial director in 1959.[19] Smedley wrote to Fisher that it was "imperative that we should give no indication in our literature that we are working to educate the public along certain lines which might be interpreted as having a political bias. ... That is why the first draft [of the IEA's aims] is written in rather cagey terms".[16]
The Social Affairs Unit was established in December 1980 as an offshoot of the Institute of Economic Affairs to carry the IEA's economic ideas onto the battleground of sociology.[26] "Within a few years the Social Affairs Unit became independent from the IEA, acquiring its own premises."[26] In 1986 the IEA created a Health and Welfare Unit to focus on these aspects of social policy.[19][26] Discussing the IEA's increasing influence under the Conservative government in the 1980s in relation to the "advent of Thatcherism" and the privatisation of public services, Dieter Plehwe, a Research Fellow at the WZB Berlin Social Science Center, has written that "[t]he arguably most influential think tank in British history ... benefited from the close alignment of IEA's neoliberal agenda with corporate interests and the priorities of the Thatcher government.[27]
During the 1990s the IEA began to focus its research on the effects of regulation,[5] and began a student outreach programme.[5] Free-market publications continued to be the core activity of the IEA.[5] Oliver Letwin said of the organisation in 1994: "without the IEA and its clones, no Thatcher and quite possibly no Reagan; without Reagan, no Star Wars; without Star Wars, no economic collapse of the Soviet Union. Quite a chain of consequences for a chicken farmer!"[28][29] In 2007 British journalist Andrew Marr called the IEA "undoubtedly the most influential think tank in modern British history".[30] Damien Cahill, a professor of Political Economy at the University of Sydney, has characterised the IEA as, "Britain's oldest and leading neoliberal think tank".[11] In October 2009 the IEA appointed Mark Littlewood as its Director General, with effect from 1 December 2009.[31] In September 2022 an associated think tank, the Free Market Forum, was founded.[32] In December 2023 Mark Littlewood stood down as the IEA's Director General and was replaced by Tom Clougherty under the title of Executive Director.[33]
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Purpose and aims
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In 2018 the IEA's then-director Mark Littlewood said "We want to totally reframe the debate about the proper role of the state and civil society in our country ... Our true mission is to change the climate of opinion."[34] The IEA promotes the market and has two prominent themes in its publications: first, a belief in limited government and, second, "the technical (and moral) superiority of markets and competitive pricing in the allocation of scarce resources."[5]
The IEA is described as a "university without students"[according to whom?] because its primary target is not politicians but "the gatekeepers of ideas", namely the intellectuals, academics, and journalists.[35] The IEA believe that a change in the intellectual climate is a pre-condition for any ideological shift within political parties or government institutions.[36]
The IEA has written policy papers arguing against government funding for pressure groups and charities involved in political campaigning.[37] The IEA does not receive government funding.[38][non-primary source needed]
The IEA supports privatising the National Health Service (NHS) with repeated calls to replace the NHS with an insurance-based health system in the UK;[39][40] campaigns against controls on junk food;[41] attacks trades unions;[42] and defends zero-hour contracts,[43] unpaid internships and tax havens.[44] IEA staff are frequently invited by the BBC and other news media to appear on broadcasts.[45][46][47] The IEA also published, between 1994 and 2007, "at least four books, as well as multiple articles and papers, ... suggesting manmade climate change may be uncertain or exaggerated [and that] climate change is either not significantly driven by human activity or will be positive", according to an October 2019 Guardian article.[12] Specifically, in 2003, the IEA published the book Climate Alarmism Reconsidered which concluded that government intervention in the name of sustainability is the major threat to energy sustainability and the provision of affordable, reliable energy to growing economies worldwide.[48] It further advocated that free-market structures and the wealth generated by markets help communities to best adapt to climate change.[48]
Concerns about political independence
As a registered charity, the IEA must abide by the regulations of the Charity Commission for England and Wales, and so cannot "promote, or be seen to promote, a political party or candidate".[49]
In July 2018, the Charity Commission opened a regulatory compliance case into the IEA due to concerns about its political independence after the then-director of the IEA was secretly recorded offering potential US donors access to government ministers and civil servants, telling an undercover reporter that his organisation was in "the Brexit influencing game". While seeking funding, Littlewood said that the IEA allowed donors to shape "substantial content" in reports.[50] The IEA denied that it breached charity law.[51] Alison White, the then-registrar of consultant lobbyists, also said she would examine whether the think tank should be registered as a lobbyist after the undercover investigation, but in 2019 the registrar concluded that the IEA did not meet "statutory criteria for consultant lobbying in this case".[52]
Also in July 2018, it emerged that casino owners had donated £8,000 to the IEA after the IEA published a report calling for fewer restrictions on casino openings,[51] and that an IEA report arguing that tax havens (such as Jersey) benefited the wider economy had been partially funded by a group representing financial interests in Jersey. The IEA stated that the funding they received never influenced the conclusions of reports, and that their output was independent and free from conflict of interest.[53]
In November 2018, the IEA removed a report on Brexit from its website after the Charity Commission said that it was "not sufficiently balanced and neutral".[54][3] In February 2019, the Commission issued an official warning to the IEA and instructed trustees to provide written assurances that the IEA would not engage in campaigning or political activity contravening legal or regulatory requirements.[55] IEA trustees were also required to implement a process to ensure that research reports and launch plans were signed off by trustees. Following the IEA's compliance, the Charity Commission withdrew the official warning in June 2019.[56]
In October 2024, the Charity Commission agreed to review concerns raised about IEA. It had initially, in March 2024, declined to investigate. A joint complaint by the Good Law Project, four cross-party politicians and a former member of the Charity Commission board had suggested the IEA had breached charity law.[57]
Freer launch
In March 2018[58] the IEA offshoot Freer was founded to promote a positive message of liberal, supply-side Conservative renewal.[59][60][failed verification] Freer held two meetings at the 2018 Conservative conference (with none in any other political parties' conferences),[61] and remains entirely within the IEA's structural and organisational control.[62] Cabinet ministers and MPs (including Michael Gove and Liz Truss) spoke at the organisation's launch. Truss called for a neoliberal "Tory revolution" spearheaded by "Uber-riding, Airbnb-ing, Deliveroo-eating freedom-fighters",[60] comments which were criticised by the Morning Star for failing to take into consideration the quality of employment within the companies mentioned.[62] Conservative blogger Paul Staines said that the launch "piqued the interest of senior ministers including Michael Gove, Dom Raab and Brexit brain Shanker Singham".[62][better source needed]
As of early 2019, the organisation had 24 parliamentary supporters, including prominent Conservative MPs such as Liz Truss, Chris Skidmore, Priti Patel, Ben Bradley, and Kemi Badenoch. Freer also holds events and publishes pamphlets for Conservative MPs, and has been referred to the Charity Commission by Private Eye for political bias.[61][needs update]
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Funding
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The IEA is a registered educational and research charity.[63] The organisation states that it is funded by "voluntary donations from individuals, companies and foundations who want to support its work, plus income from book sales and conferences",[64] and says that it is "independent of any political party or group".[64] The Charity Commission listed total income of £2.34 million and expenditure of £2.33 million for the financial year ending 31 March 2021.[63]
The IEA policy is to allow donors to choose whether or not to disclose their funding.[65] Some publish their grants to the IEA;[66] others do not. It has been criticised for receiving minor funding (less than 5% of revenue) from major tobacco companies whilst campaigning on tobacco industry issues.[34][67] British American Tobacco (BAT) confirmed it had donated £40,000 to the IEA in 2013,[68] £20,000 in 2012 and £10,000 in 2011, and Philip Morris International and Japan Tobacco International also confirmed they provide financial support to the IEA.[69] In 2002, a leaked letter revealed that a prominent IEA member, the right-wing writer Roger Scruton, had authored an IEA pamphlet attacking the World Health Organisation's campaign on tobacco, whilst failing to disclose that he was receiving £54,000 a year from Japan Tobacco International.[70][71] In response, the IEA said it would introduce an author declaration policy.[71] The IEA also says that it "accepts no tied funding".[72]
An organisation called American Friends of the IEA had received US$215,000 as of 2010 from the U.S.-based Donors Trust and Donors Capital Fund, donor-advised funds which support right-wing causes.[73] The think tank Transparify, which is funded by the Open Society Foundations, in 2015 ranked the IEA as one of the top three least transparent think tanks in the UK in relation to funding.[74][75] The IEA responded by saying "It is a matter for individual donors whether they wish their donation to be public or private – we leave that entirely to their discretion", and that it has not "earmarked money for commissioned research work from any company".[74]
Funding to the IEA from the alcohol industry, food industry, and sugar industry has also been documented.[76] IEA Research Fellow Christopher Snowdon disclosed alcohol industry funding in a response to a British Medical Journal article in 2014.[76] In October 2018, an investigation by Greenpeace found that the IEA was also receiving funding from the oil giant BP, which was "[using] this access to press ministers on issues ranging from environmental and safety standards to British tax rates."[77] In May 2019, the British Medical Journal revealed that British American Tobacco was continuing to fund the IEA.[78][79] In November 2022, the funding transparency website Who Funds You? rated the institute as E, the lowest transparency rating (rating goes from A to E). This was updated to a D rating in December 2023.[80]
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Reception
In early 2019, on national radio station LBC, James O'Brien called the IEA a politically motivated lobbying organisation funded by "dark money" of "questionable provenance, with dubious ideas and validity", staffed by people who are not proper experts on their topic. The IEA complained to the UK media regulator Ofcom that those remarks were inaccurate and unfair. In August 2021, Ofcom rejected the complaint.[81][82]
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Publications
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Arthur Seldon proposed a series of Papers for economists to explore the neoliberal approach to the issues of the day.[19] Eventually, these emerged as the Hobart Papers; 154 had been published by August 2006. In addition, 32 Hobart Paperbacks had been released along with 139 Occasional Papers, 61 Readings and 61 Research Monographs.[19] They published The Denationalization of Money by Hayek in 1977.
Research
According to the IEA, although not an academic body, the institute's research activities are aided by an international Academic Advisory Council and a panel of Honorary Fellows. The IEA's work is generally more theoretical than political, and has a refereeing process for all its publications.[35] They note that their papers are subjected to the same refereeing process used by academic journals,[72] and that the views expressed in IEA papers are those of the authors and not of the IEA, its trustees, directors, or advisors. The IEA has also published research in areas including business ethics, economic development, education, pensions, regulation, taxation, and transport.
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Notable people
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Honorary Fellows
Personnel and Fellows
As of 2024, the IEA had full and part-time 26 employees, 9 trustees (unpaid volunteers), and 3 former chairmen who serve as life vice presidents;[83] additionally, the IEA has an Academic Advisory Council with dozens of professors and other academics.[84]
Directors
- Ralph Harris 1957–1988
- Graham Mather 1988–1993
- John Blundell 1993–2009
- Mark Littlewood 2009–2023
- Tom Clougherty 2023–
Chairmen of the Board of Trustees
- Antony Fisher 1955–1988
- Nigel Vinson 1988–1995
- Harold Rose 1995–1998
- Sir Peter Walters 1998–2001
- Professor D.R. Myddelton 2001–2015
- Neil Record 2015–2023
- Linda Edwards 2023–
Members of the Board of Trustees (current and former)
- Kevin Bell
- Christian Bjornskov
- Robert Boyd
- Tim Congdon
- Linda Edwards
- Robin Edwards
- Antony Fisher
- Mike Fisher
- Tom Harris
- Michael Hintze
- Malcolm McAlpine
- Patrick Minford
- David Myddelton
- Mark Pennington
- Bruno Prior
- Neil Record
- Sir Michael Richardson
- Martin Ricketts
- Harold Rose
- Len Shackelton
- Nigel Vinson
- Linda Whetstone
- Geoffrey Wood
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See also
References
Further reading
External links
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