A major economy is facing a minor recession in the aftermath of a once-in-a-generation energy shock and a once-in-a-generation inflation spike. If history tells us anything, it's that major economic powers are phenomenally robust.
...and now Britain is a first-world economy with a very high standard of living and home to one of the greatest financial centers in the history of the world.
About half of England (the bit closest to London) is in a good state, Wales not so much, likewise much of The North.
How much of the blame you assign to the Tories, to Brexit, to Covid, and to the global economic repercussions of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, is up for debate; but the quality of life was very noticeably worse when I last visited friends and family back on the island, compared to my final pre-lockdown trip.
However, none of that is quite as substantial as the colossal loss of relative power that came from the pyrrhic victories of the two World Wars that cost it control of the largest empire the world had ever seen, and left it losing a series of disputes over fishing rights to a country whose primary military forces are its coast guard.
>left it losing a series of disputes over fishing rights to a country whose primary military forces are its coast guard
Why shouldn't Iceland be in control of fishing in own waters and instead expect it to give it up to the UK to come and take as it pleases? Using your navy to take other country's resources is basically a war crime.
This particular series of disputes was regarding the increase of "it's own waters" from 3 miles from the coast to 12/200 miles and if that was even legit.
The last time the West faced a major inflation spike with the mid-to-late 70's (and it was WAY worse than this), about a generation ago. The same can be said of the last major energy crisis.
If you have facts I am unaware of feel free to share them.
That would imply bankruptcies, mass unemployment, etc. But for some reason only the people on anglophile Youtube see this collapse. Germany mostly muddles through.
That is not to say there are no problems. But "collapse" is an absurd hyperbole.