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UK Now Ranked Between 25th and 29th in GDP Per Capita, Projected Poland Overtake

Triggernometry · The Rise and Fall of Gary's Economics - Konstantin Kisin · July 14, 2026
UK Now Ranked Between 25th and 29th in GDP Per Capita, Projected Poland Overtake
Triggernometry
Triggernometry
The Rise and Fall of Gary's Economics - Konstantin Kisin
"We're currently somewhere between 25th and 29th in GDP per capita in the world and are projected to be overtaken on living standards by Poland. That's not my claim. It's Kia Staris. We have the highest industrial electricity prices in the developed world thanks to the lunacy of net zero, which has both destroyed our manufacturing and made us uncompetitive in the world of AI where most future growth is going to come from."
The speaker presents data showing Britain's dramatic economic decline, citing that the UK now ranks between 25th and 29th globally in GDP per capita and is projected to fall behind Poland in living standards. He attributes this to net zero policies creating the highest industrial electricity prices in the developed world, destroying manufacturing competitiveness and AI sector potential.

About this episode

In this monologue, the host delivers a critique of Gary Stevenson, a former Citigroup trader turned left-wing content creator and inequality activist. The speaker argues that physical separation enabled by social media has degraded political discourse, allowing figures like Stevenson to build large audiences without facing rigorous scrutiny. The host claims Stevenson, who describes himself as the world's best trader and a leading inequality expert, fundamentally misunderstands basic economic concepts like the difference between assets and income. A clip is featured showing Daniel Priestley attempting to explain taxation differences between income and inherited estates to Stevenson, who appears confused. The speaker cites criticism from tax expert Dan Needle and The Guardian, both questioning Stevenson's research quality and grasp of the issues despite his passionate advocacy for wealth taxes. The monologue frames Stevenson as pandering to economic illiteracy rather than offering genuine solutions. The host argues Britain's real problem is not wealth inequality but overall economic decline, citing data that the UK now ranks between 25th and 29th in global GDP per capita and is projected to be overtaken by Poland in living standards. He attributes this to net zero policies creating the world's highest industrial electricity prices, destroying manufacturing and AI competitiveness. The speaker, who was born in the Soviet Union, opposes wealth taxes on principle, warning against policies driven by envy. He expresses relief at what he describes as the implosion of Stevenson's credibility, arguing bad economic ideas are dangerous precisely because they appeal to people's worst instincts.

Key takeaways

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