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But what you fail to mention is that you’re not talking about “mutuals” as they’re commonly conceived… Wholly owned by the participants.
This is simply privatisation by stealth.
I can’t help but smile at the Conservative Party referencing William Hazell to justify an argument on mutuals. In reading ‘William Hazell’s Gleaming Vision’ you will have seen the disdain in which Hazell held the Tories. While he was much too proper to have used Bevan’s term ‘lower than vermin’ he would agree that he held them in extremely low regard. Hazell was a socialist. While he disagreed with the form of collective organisation of the coal and other industries used by the 1945 Labour Government, he infinitely preferred that to the free market capitalism which prevailed before and afterwards. As presumably you know from having read the book – but just chose not to say… I wonder why?
The interest in mutualist economic alternatives to the current dispensation seems to be receiving a steady trickle of attention from ResPublica: as this article indicates, that trickle deserves to become a flood. Co-operatives are the obvious basis for generating movement beyond the entrenched Market/State dichotomy that poisons contemporary political debate. I’d love to see more vocal commitment to this tradition from one of the UK’s major thinktanks.