Great British National Restoration Framework

The End State

The Britain we expect to emerge after the successful completion of the 20-year transition.

The Anticipated End State

The Size and Role of the State

By the end of the transition, the British state will be a true minimal night-watchman state — focused almost exclusively on national defence, border control, and the suppression of serious violence and fraud. All other functions will have been returned to individuals, families, markets, civil society, and local communities.

Tax Burden and Economy

The overall tax burden is expected to settle at approximately 8–12% of GDP, funded primarily through the Pigouvian Externality Tax Suite (PETS). This represents one of the lowest sustained tax burdens in the developed world and will drive substantially higher real wages, capital accumulation, and economic growth.

Society and Daily Life

The resulting Britain will be:

  • Wealthier and more dynamic — with significantly higher disposable income and economic freedom
  • More Local — real power devolved to historic counties, boroughs and parishes
  • Revived Local Economy — independent shops, village pubs, and small businesses will flourish again as energy costs are fully internalised and artificial transport subsidies are removed
  • Safer — much lower crime rates thanks to responsive FLIP policing and stronger cultural norms
  • Demographically Healthier — native fertility rising toward replacement level, supported by STORK, private marriage, and lower living costs
  • Greener & Darker — cleaner environment and noticeably darker night skies as light pollution is taxed and reduced
Why We Expect This Outcome

These outcomes are not utopian hopes but logical consequences of the policy suite:

  • Radical reduction in taxation and regulation removes the dead weight on enterprise and family formation
  • Full internalisation of externalities (via PETS) rewards efficiency and responsibility
  • Privatisation and localism restore proper incentives and accountability
  • Earned citizenship and controlled immigration preserve social trust and cohesion
  • Mechanical restraints (gold anchoring, Jubilee, subsidiarity) prevent the state from re-expanding

Together, these changes shift Britain from a high-tax, high-regulation, low-trust society back toward a high-liberty, high-responsibility, high-trust nation.

The Goal

A prosperous, secure, and free Britain — where the state is strong where it must be, and absent where it should be. A country that feels like home again: safe, beautiful, neighbourly, orderly, and unmistakably British.