The Great British Decline: Paying More for Less
If there is one thing the British state has mastered in the 21st century, it is the art of charging luxury prices for third-rate service. Between 2010 and 2026, your Council Tax Band D bill has bloated by a staggering 50.9%, climbing from £1,439 to £2,171. You are now coughing up £732 more every single year for the privilege of watching your local area slowly crumble into aesthetic and functional decay.
Look at the roads. They are no longer thoroughfares; they are obstacle courses of potholes that seem to have been engineered specifically to destroy your suspension. Look at your bin collections—or rather, the lack thereof. Services that were once reliable fixtures of daily life have become erratic, unreliable, and increasingly infrequent. The local parks are less manicured, the streetlights flicker with a ghostly inconsistency, and the basic dignity of public service has been replaced by the weary bureaucracy of "doing less with more."
From an evolutionary perspective, human institutions often follow the same path as aging organisms: they grow bloated, inefficient, and obsessed with self-preservation rather than function. As these structures expand, their internal friction increases. The surplus energy—your tax money—is no longer spent on the "roads and bins" of the kingdom, but on sustaining the bloated administrative layer that exists to justify its own existence.
It is a classic case of the "parasite-host" dynamic. The state, having lost its ability to provide basic utility, has become a rent-seeker. It continues to extract resources at an increasing rate, not because it is improving the service, but simply because it can. We are stuck in a loop of paying a "stagnation tax," where the only thing growing is the cost of our own dissatisfaction. Whether it’s 18th-century feudalism or 21st-century local government, the story remains the same: the rulers never stop collecting, even when the roof is caving in.