Welcome to Oxford+, the podcast series that explores the myths and truths of the Oxford investing landscape hosted by Susannah de Jager. Since moving to Oxford, Susannah has collaborated with experts, entrepreneurs, and government to shape the conversation around domestic scale-up capital. Oxford+ aims to inform, inspire, and connect. We'll talk to Founders, investors, academics, politicians, and facilitators and explore how Oxford is open for business.
[00:00:01] Susannah de Jager: Alongside our main episodes of Oxford Plus for Season Four we are introducing a short fortnightly miniseries in between the main episodes. Brought to you by me, Susannah de Jager, and in partnership with Mishcon de Reya. In each episode, we ask our guests the same four questions designed to reveal how they think, what shapes their decisions, and what they're curious about right now. The questions stay the same. The answers rarely do. This is Oxford Plus in brief.
[00:00:27] Thank you Lord Hague. Just a few quick questions for you for the mini episode. What would success look like if we got this right and for this conversation, I mean, innovation in the UK?
[00:00:39] Lord William Hague: Success would be that the UK would again, be one of the most prosperous countries in the world. There would be great careers for young people in Britain, and we'd be able to say, when we look at the whole area between Oxford, Cambridge, and London, well, that is the place in the world to be. To make money. To build a career. To learn. That's where the movers and the shakers are. That would be success.
[00:01:04] Susannah de Jager: What advice would you give somebody entering the Oxford ecosystem tomorrow?
[00:01:09] Lord William Hague: You are entering a fantastic ecosystem. You've come to the right place. You will find an abundance of talent. You'll be able to invent some of the world's best technology. But you will need the capital. So I hope that person arriving in the ecosystem, he's bringing some capital to invest in all the talent.
[00:01:29] Susannah de Jager: Wonderful. What is Oxford uniquely good at and what is it structurally bad at?
[00:01:36] Lord William Hague: It's uniquely good at, although other universities would come close, at really cherishing all disciplines and having the fullest possible breadth and this is true in particular across science of having the entire breadth of human intellectual endeavor. Of course what any university like that can be bad at is rapid change and bringing everybody along together because it has a very decentralised structure there. There are great strengths in decentralisation. As I said in my speech of being admitted as Chancellor, we may make mistakes, but there's no danger we will all make the same mistake at the same time because it's so decentralised.
[00:02:21] But that can mean that it's difficult to respond quickly enough.
[00:02:25] Susannah de Jager: And in your opinion, what do you think Oxford will look like, in whatever that means to you, in 2050.
[00:02:34] Lord William Hague: Well, I hope it will look very similar, of course, because one of its great attributes is it's one of the most beautiful cities in the world and that does actually contribute to its intellectual and social environment. So I hope it looks very similar, although with ever, ever more numerous and stronger science parks and growth zones around Oxfordshire and around and about Oxford.
[00:02:59] So physically I hope it looks like that. It looks today like a place where the whole world can meet and make connections and share ideas. I hope it's even more central to what's going on in the world. Even more than today.
[00:03:16] Susannah de Jager: Wonderful. Thank you very much.
[00:03:18] Lord William Hague: Thank you.
[00:03:19] Susannah de Jager: Thanks for listening to this episode of Oxford+, presented by me, Susannah de Jager. If you want to stay up to date with all things Oxford+, please visit our website, oxfordplus.co.uk and sign up for our newsletter so you never miss an update. Oxford+ was made in partnership with Mishcon de Reya and is produced and edited by Story Ninety-Four.