In 2011, a group of 16/17 year olds got access to the corridors of power and talked to top people in business, finance, politics and the media, and asked them who ran the place?
Lots of people are asking the question ‘Who runs this place?’ Is it the bankers, the politicians, big business, the police, the church, the media? Who?
A year ago a group of us tried to find out. We researched the biggest companies and institutions in the UK and then found out the names of the people that run them. We raised some money from Rowntree and got on the phone.
We were treated to some surprising revelations:
‘No, it’s not the politicians who run things’ said ex BP chief Lord Browne, ‘it’s the people that get things done’. Did he mean business people like himself? ‘Yes, at BP, I made record profits for any company in the UK, ever!’
Sir John Bond of Vodafone pressed the point home: ‘I suppose it’s the Government, but they don’t have any money; we give them the money’. Adding a little ruefully ‘I don’t even get a thank you letter when I send the corporate tax into the Exchequer’.
Millionaire businessman Jon Moulton, the one who gave gifts to disgraced minister Liam Fox, was very direct: ‘Wealth enables you to get people to do what you would like rather than what they would like’.
‘But don’t some people have too much money?’ we asked Philip Hampton, head of RBS? ‘Yes greed is an ugly word’ he admitted. ‘But as a bank we are worth trillions, we deal with numbers that are unimaginable to most people’ and what’s more ‘modern life is inconceivable without the banks’.
So money is calling the shots, but what about the media?
‘You get us to want what you want us to want’ challenged Mikael, age 16.
Even though the Murdochs refused to talk to us, their presence overshadowed the media interviews we did. Ex BBC director general Greg Dyke led the charge: ‘The things I did at the BBC were deliberately designed to limit the power of the Murdoch operation. So we invented Freeview to stop Sky dominating the digital world’.
Not to be outdone The Sun sent us James Murdoch’s MacTaggart Lecture: ‘BBC news is state sponsored journalism’ he declared. That was nasty. What did Alan Yentob think of that? ‘Absolute tosh’ responded the BBC’s Creative Director, diplomatically. The feud continues.
What surprised us most after 9 months of interviews? Nobody thought that MPs ran the place, in fact apart from the interviews with the MPs themselves, no one even mentioned them.
When we were doing the research we spoke to Stephanie Flanders, economics editor at the BBC. She came up with an insight that ‘haunted’ all the research:
‘It’s true that there’s a club mentality that runs Britain and they all have similar assumptions, and they went to the same schools. It’s open in that people can join it, but it’s quite hard to join and the worry is it’s becoming harder. So there’s a particular mindset that runs Britain, even though it’s not a single mind.
By Billy Ridgers
Look at the website:
And there’s a DVD with the full interviews:
Contact Billy Ridgers:
I started on the work programme this month… my 2nd week in it, with Reed, I was given their CEO’s book: “Put your mindset to work – The one asset you really need to win and keep the job you love”… the word “mindset” features about 100+ in the first few chapters… his ghost writer I assume is Paul G Stoltz, Phd who runs a training business from California…so… a camaleonic [I don't know if that's even a word] kind of ‘mindset’
Occupy’mindset’ : )!
Hi Occupy Folks,
I was in London the last two weeks and past the occupy site many times and I have to say i’m still confused and if I’m honest disgruntled by your protest because simplisticly from and outsider looking in you your giving me mixed messages. Reading the postings on the walls around the camp I founf it interesting to see the old classic signs of ‘you don’t need money to be happy” only to walk five more meters and find a sign requesting donations. Then I read and article in the paper about the corporations who are supporting you such as Pauls. So I’m confused.
I’m not talking about St.Pauls. I’m talking about the article run in the evening standard called “camponomics” which details some donoations from companies such as bread from Pauls Bakeries and hand wash from a company in the north. Besides that you also miss the point of what I’m saying. You only get one chance to make a first impression and when I have visited the initial reaction from what people can see clearly is not delivering the message you want.