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Britain's GDP Per Capita Lower Today Than Before 2007 Financial Crisis

Triggernometry · The Great British Delusion - Konstantin Kisin · June 2, 2026
Britain's GDP Per Capita Lower Today Than Before 2007 Financial Crisis
Triggernometry
Triggernometry
The Great British Delusion - Konstantin Kisin
"Britain's GDP per capita is lower today than it was in 2007 before the Great Financial Crisis."
Konstantin Kisin revealed that Britain has experienced negative real GDP per capita growth over 17 years, a startling indicator of long-term economic decline. He argues this stagnation is masked by mass immigration which inflates headline GDP figures without improving prosperity per person, creating a misleading picture of economic health.

About this episode

In this monologue, political commentator Konstantin Kisin dismantled what he calls the Great British Delusion: the widespread failure of British voters to recognize the country's long-term economic decline. Kisin revealed that Britain's GDP per capita is lower today than it was in 2007, making citizens objectively poorer despite headline GDP growth driven almost entirely by mass immigration. He argued that politicians from both Labour and Conservative parties have been perversely incentivized to use immigration as a tool to inflate total GDP figures while individual prosperity falls, with net immigration exceeding 900,000 in 2023 despite repeated Conservative promises to reduce it. The most striking revelation came from a Freshwater Strategy poll showing over half of British voters falsely believe the UK is as wealthy as or wealthier than the United States, when in reality Britain is 40% poorer than America, 20% poorer than Australia, and only half as wealthy as Switzerland. Poland is poised to overtake Britain entirely. Kisin contended this profound economic illiteracy prevents voters from understanding that their declining living standards are not personal failures or the result of insufficient wealth redistribution, but rather the predictable outcome of net-zero policies, welfarism, high taxation, and regulatory overreach. He warned that until voters grasp the true causes of national poverty, they will continue electing politicians who promise redistribution and implement the very policies that caused the decline in the first place, creating a vicious cycle of deepening impoverishment.

Key takeaways

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