So the British government blocks a payout to British Steel because the parent company is Chinese. The nationalists cheer. The left applauds. The right mutters approval. Everyone feels a warm glow of virtuous protectionism. But let me ask the question nobody wants to hear: at what point did we decide that foreign ownership of our industrial base is acceptable, as long as the state can occasionally micro-manage the losses? This is not sovereignty. This is the death rattle of a nation that has sold its patrimony and now quarrels over the receipts.
We are living through a curious historical inversion. In the Victorian era, capital flowed freely across borders, but the nation state retained its cultural and political coherence. Today, we have the opposite: capital is increasingly trapped by nationalist rhetoric, while our actual institutions, our universities, our media, our legal systems, have become globalised to the point of rootlessness. The steel industry is a perfect symbol. It was once the backbone of British industrial might. Now it is a subsidiary of a Chinese conglomerate, and the government's main concern is not how to rebuild a domestic steel capability, but how to punish the parent company for not paying a dividend. This is the politics of the small print, not the grand vision.
Let me offer a parallel. In the late Roman Empire, the state became obsessed with regulating the grain dole, the price of bread, the movement of goods, while the legions were manned by Germanic mercenaries. The Romans thought they were preserving order. In reality, they were administering decline. The same is happening here. We obsess over the ownership of a few steel mills while our entire manufacturing base crumbles. We argue over foreign dividends while our energy policy makes industry uncompetitive. We perform rituals of national control while the substance of national power evaporates.
The real problem, of course, is not the Chinese. It is the decades of intellectual decadence that convinced us that industry was passe, that finance was the future, that we could live by shuffling paper while others made things. The Victorians, for all their faults, understood that national strength required a productive base. They built railways, shipyards, steelworks. We built derivatives, hedge funds, and property empires. And now we are surprised that our steel industry is owned by a Chinese company? What did we expect?
The government's hard line on the dividend is a distraction. It allows politicians to sound tough while doing nothing about the underlying decline. It is the equivalent of rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic, but with a stern lecture about immigration quotas. The real question is: does Britain want to make steel again? If the answer is yes, then we need an industrial policy that goes far beyond blocking payouts. We need energy costs that are competitive. We need a skilled workforce. We need a government that sees manufacturing not as a problem to be managed, but as a pillar of national identity. If the answer is no, then let us be honest about our post-industrial future and stop pretending that blocking a dividend is a patriotic act.
I am reminded of a line from the historian Arnold Toynbee: 'Civilizations die from suicide, not by murder.' The British steel industry did not die because of Chinese ownership. It died because we stopped believing in it. The government's current stance is not a sign of renewed belief. It is a tantrum. And tantrums do not build steel mills. They build resentment. So by all means, block the payout. But do not mistake this for a policy. It is a gesture. And gestures are the last refuge of the powerless.









