The state cannot meet people's needs, and inevitably ends up as 'one size fits all' that does not meet individual and community needs, or the needs of employers for skill and motivated workers
The introduction into areas run by the state (such as education or the NHS) of market forces of consumer choice and competition between suppliers (such as schools or hospitals)
The state should create the framework for competition between schools (e.g. by publishing league tables of exam results and by setting a national curriculum that all schools must teach)
The state still has to ensure that schools transmit society's shared culture through a curriculum that emphasises a shared national identity (e.g. through the teaching of British history)
Although school standards - as measured by exam results-seem to have risen, there are other possible reasons for this improvement apart from the introduction of a market