As recently as 2018, Harrods, the luxury department store in Knightsbridge, was home to one of London’s more macabre shop displays. It featured a small, pyramid-shaped cabinet, containing a lipstick-smeared wine glass and a ring. Above these relics were portraits of the couple that had handled them not long before their death, their faces joined by an elaborate swirling frame. They were Dodi Fayed, the son of former Harrods owner Mohamed Al Fayed, and Diana, Princess of Wales. The pair perished in a car accident in 1997.

Al Fayed himself died last year at the age of 94, having sold Harrods to the Qatari royal family in 2010. He will therefore remain unanswerable to the dozens of women who, following a BBC investigation, have accused him of sexual assault and harassment over the past week. A tragic evasion, but typical of the slippery Al Fayed, a man whose life story appears consciously crafted for novelists and filmmakers — essentially a cross between The Talented Mr. Ripley and The Godfather. The outlines of that tale can be found in his bizarre shrine to Diana and Dodi.

Orchestrating an affair between his son and the recently divorced princess was part of Al Fayed’s long-term efforts to penetrate the British upper classes. This campaign involved country houses, Rolls Royces, fine tailoring, and of course the prestigious institution of Harrods itself, a dubious acquisition that launched years of legal proceedings and official investigations. By most accounts, Al Fayed came across as a short-tempered buffoon, yet he was cunning enough to leave a string of powerful individuals fuming in his wake. The list includes a Haitian dictator, numerous business connections in the West and the Arab Gulf states, as well as the British politicians he bribed and then, when it suited him, exposed as corrupt.

His repertoire tended to involve claims of an illustrious heritage in the Middle East — hence the addition of the honorific “al” to his name in 1974. Hence, also, the choice of a pyramid to entomb Diana’s wine glass; Al Fayed used to claim that he himself would be mummified in a glass pyramid on the roof of Harrods. In reality, he had risen from the slums of Alexandria, Egypt, the son of a school inspector.

But Al Fayed’s personal aspirations and depravities should not distract us from his real achievements as an illusionist. His sentimental exploitation of Diana, “the people’s princess” as Tony Blair called her, suggests that he had other audiences in mind. His extravagant, superficial vision of Britishness may not have fooled the old money whose acceptance he craved, but it has turned out to be strangely successful with both wealthy foreign clients and the public at home.

The recent history of Harrods is, in large part, the story of London’s eminence as a global hub for private wealth. Though Britain is not a fabulously rich country — in terms of economic output per person, it ranks 20 or 30-something in the world, depending on the source — it is very good at attracting rich individuals, hosting the third highest number of millionaires globally. This has a lot to do with the City of London’s status as a financial hub, not least its role, over the past 70 years or so, in handling transactions between foreign entities, and helping to divert global wealth to offshore tax havens. (In 2022, Russia’s attack on Ukraine briefly drew attention to the possibility that, shockingly, not all the cash flowing to “Londongrad” was entirely clean.)

Other attractions include the UK’s controversial “non-dom” status, allowing wealth earned and kept overseas to avoid tax for 15 years, and “golden visas” that offer fast-tracked residency rights in exchange for investment. Add to this the appeal of the London property market, with more than 62,000 London homes registered to overseas owners.

But we should not overlook the importance of lifestyle and status symbols. Britain has a genius for luring High Net-Worth Individuals into a kind of fantasy world — a world where the First World War never happened, and the most modern luxuries somehow coexist with an eternal Edwardian splendour. Townhouses in Mayfair and Chelsea maintain their stately exteriors, even as they conceal vast underground swimming pools and garages stuffed with Range Rovers. Public schools and universities offer their overseas students the trappings of British tradition, together with the most up-to-date facilities. From the Old War Office in Whitehall (now the Raffles OWO hotel) to Admiralty Arch in Trafalgar Square (soon to be a Waldorf Astoria), London’s architectural heritage is being sold off and repurposed for luxury hospitality.

“Britain has a genius for luring High Net-Worth Individuals into a kind of fantasy world.”

This is a trend that Al Fayed’s Harrods anticipated and tested to the limit. Its baroque facades and cavernous, gorgeously decorated interiors, along with a heavy emphasis on its British heritage, provide an irresistible veil of respectability and aesthetic refinement (“enter a different world”, as the store’s slogan used to go). Behind that veil, as recent testimonies claim, Al Fayed oversaw an insidious regime of surveillance and intimidation. But it also provided an ideal backdrop for the increasingly cosmopolitan business of luxury retail, where “pretty graduate English girls” with white skin — Al Fayed’s specifications, according to a former HR employee — sold Italian handbags, French perfumes and Swiss watches to wealthy clients from all corners of Eurasia. By 2020, Chinese customers were responsible for 25% of sales at Harrods, while the store claimed that it represented half of Middle-Eastern spending in the UK.

It is one thing to entertain foreign customers in this way; more remarkable is that, all the while, institutions such as Harrods have maintained their position as familiar landmarks in British life. Perhaps this is my own foreign background speaking, but even as a child, I was vaguely aware that public life in the UK was littered with grand-sounding traditions which had been popularised as tourist attractions, from Ascot and Wimbledon to the royal family itself. Harrods was one of the words in this lexicon. The store’s glamorous visitors occupied the gossip pages in much the same way, it now occurs to me, that the personal lives of the aristocracy had a century earlier. The shrine to Diana and Dodi should be seen in this context: it showed an understanding that Harrods is not just a luxury brand but, in some peculiarly British way, a popular one.

The broader point is that we have been more accepting of the fantasies created by the likes of Al Fayed than we like to admit. London’s “private wealth community”, as its richest inhabitants are sometimes hilariously called, has long enjoyed the blessing of British governments. New Labour and Tory chancellors have justified its privileged treatment on the grounds that, if such individuals are not appeased, they will simply take their money and businesses elsewhere. But such threats have been successful because another, unspoken logic has been operating at the same time. As much of Britain has struggled economically, the ability to attract a wealthy elite — and one that celebrates traditional symbols of Britishness — has provided the illusion of a successful, affluent country. Even people whose own experience contradicts this idea might still want to believe it.

But the allegations against Al Fayed, however, have come as London’s appeal to private wealth appears to be waning. With Labour’s plan to trim down non-doms’ benefits (which the Conservatives promised as well), and to levy VAT on private education, the advisory firm Henley & Partners is predicting the departure of almost 10,000 millionaires from the UK this year. Only China faces a larger exodus. In fact, Britain has been shedding wealthy residents since 2017. This is partly due to the decline of the London Stock Exchange and Brexit-related shifts in finance and trade. But other causes include a deteriorating health system and rising crime — including violent watch thefts outside Harrods itself. The real London can no longer be kept separate from the imagined one.

And it seems that the symbols of British heritage can simply be transplanted overseas. China has facsimile public schools, Hogwarts-inspired architecture and a mock-Tudor town; now Harrods has opened a private members’ club in Shanghai.

So we may soon get a test of the claim that losing the very wealthy will damage the UK’s prospects. There is doubtless some truth in it: generally speaking, capital flight is not a sign of economic health. But the decline of High Net-Worth London may also bring some benefits. Perhaps it will force our politicians to finally address the economic malaise of much of Britain outside the South East — and deny us the luxury of taking guilty pride in Knightsbridge.

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Source: UnHerd Read the original article here: https://unherd.com/