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I see the economy is growing alot faster than expected. Where is this double dip recession you were all on about?
MrFrost wrote:QuoteI see the economy is growing alot faster than expected. Where is this double dip recession you were all on about?Wait until the cuts bite! they were only announced a week ago! The growth you are seeing now is the effect of the previous governments policies![/quote]That old chesnut.
Filo wrote:QuoteMrFrost wrote:QuoteI see the economy is growing alot faster than expected. Where is this double dip recession you were all on about?Wait until the cuts bite! they were only announced a week ago! The growth you are seeing now is the effect of the previous governments policies![/quote]That old chesnut.Do your tags correctly, it`s not a good advertisement for an IT expert is it?
Filo wrote:QuoteMrFrost wrote:QuoteI see the economy is growing alot faster than expected. Where is this double dip recession you were all on about?Wait until the cuts bite! they were only announced a week ago! The growth you are seeing now is the effect of the previous governments policies![/quote]That old chesnut.No truthful
MrFrost wrote:QuoteFilo wrote:QuoteMrFrost wrote:QuoteI see the economy is growing alot faster than expected. Where is this double dip recession you were all on about?Wait until the cuts bite! they were only announced a week ago! The growth you are seeing now is the effect of the previous governments policies![/quote]That old chesnut.No truthfulOf course it's the truth. These figures are for the period Jul-Sept this year. There is nothing that the current Govt could possibly have done to affect these numbers greatly. The last two quarters of exceptional growth are entirely down to the policies put in place by Brown and Darling with the aim of getting us out of the depth of the recession quickly.The figures today are BACKWARD indicators, as is current unemployment. They tell you about the effects of economic policy decisions taken 1-2 years ago.What is now very worrying is the state of the FORWARD indicators; the ones that take current policy decisions into account and predict what will happen over the next couple of years. In particular, business confidence in their own immediate prospects, which has begun to fall over the last 6 months. Historically, the business confidence figures predict the state of the economy over the next year or so. Not perfectly, but pretty well. Confidence started to collapse in mid-2007 and we went into recession in late 2008. Confidence started to rise in early 2009 and we came out of recession in late 2009. Now business confidence has started falling again. Conclusion? At the very least, the growth that we are seeing now will not continue as strongly. At worst, the private sector loses confidence more rapidly, stops investing and taking on new recruits and the public sector cuts push us off a cliff. Either way, it's hard to see us having a vibrant economy over the next 2-3 years without a determined Govt effort to bolster confidence and encourage growth. And that simply will not happen with this lot, because their ideology does not let them accept that Government action can result in economic growth.
I tell you what though, when I was back at uni one of my lecturers had a big rant about the effect of the media on recession and we're seeing it right now. Scaremongering from unions and the like. Now their points may well come to fruition but their points are also going to have an effect on the lesser educated who will believe what they say even though it's set in stone. The scaremongering at the moment is not a good thing and may see us going the way of France with their protests and that does nobody any good.
big fat yorkshire pudding wrote:QuoteI tell you what though, when I was back at uni one of my lecturers had a big rant about the effect of the media on recession and we're seeing it right now. Scaremongering from unions and the like. Now their points may well come to fruition but their points are also going to have an effect on the lesser educated who will believe what they say even though it's set in stone. The scaremongering at the moment is not a good thing and may see us going the way of France with their protests and that does nobody any good.Scaremongering? I'll give you scaremongering.Scaremongering was what Cameron, Osbourne and Clegg did when they said that we could go the same way as Greece if we didn't pitch in to the biggest public sector cuts in 80 years. THAT was scaremongering, as well as being plain and simple LIES. Anyone who knows anything about the situation knew that they were talking utter bullshit. 1) Our basic debt level was half that of Greece. 2) Our economy was already growing again, unlike theirs, so our ability to finance our debt was far higher thatn theirs. 3) Most importantly, our debt is mainly financed by long-term bonds, unlike Greece's, which has to be re-financed regularly because their debt is mainly in short-term bonds. Put the 3 togther, and we were not remotely in the same situation as Greece. But terrifying people into thinking that we were bankrupt did a political job.I'll give you a second example of scaremongering. In April 2009, Alastair Darling predicted in the Budget that the reflationary measures that the Labour Govt had put in place would mean that we would emerge strongly from the recession in 2010. He predicted that we would see 1.25% growth in 2010. He was savaged by Cameron and Osbourne, the monetarist tyrants in the IMF and the gobshites in the Tory press.Osbourne accused him using the Treasury to invent \"fantasy\" growth predictions for political purposes. Vince Cable said the predictions were \"utter fantasy - no one believes that we will get growth like that next year.\" The IMF said that the growth prediction was \"unreliable\" and said that they believed the economy would SHRINK by 0.4% in 2010. The right-wing Centre for Economic Business Research said \"This is a work of fiction. The economy will probably stagnate in 2010 and grow very slowly after that.\" As it happens, the economy has grown by more than 2% in the first nine months of 2010 (because of the stimulus package put in place by Labour and bitterly denounced by the Tories).So, who was right?And who was scaremongering for political aims?
Not sure I agree with the recession is an enivitable consequence of a capitalist economy, even Gordon Brown promised an end to boom and bust cyclical economy that had plagued the country year on year.I do agree that no one single person or group of persons can be held responsible, thats why I can't understand why \"Call me Dave\" et al have been allowed to get away with this \"J'accuse\" regarding the state of the economy, and people are buying into it!Now it appears we are to follow this glorious plan that is going to lead us away from the bogey man who is going to come knocking on the door of 10 downing street asking for his/their money back, and my question to the chancellor would be what is the specific plan, what economy doctrine/text is it following, and what measure/ set of measures can we use to evaluate the effectiveness of your plan? [img/]
Not sure I agree with the recession is an enivitable consequence of a capitalist economy, even Gordon Brown promised an end to boom and bust cyclical economy that had plagued the country year on year.
Savvy wrote:QuoteNot sure I agree with the recession is an enivitable consequence of a capitalist economy, even Gordon Brown promised an end to boom and bust cyclical economy that had plagued the country year on year.Economic cycles and 'boom and bust' are not the same thing. Economic cycles happen, 'boom and bust' was the way of politically dealing with them.
QuoteBrown did a damn good job of sailing the economy away from boom and bust cycles for a decade and we STILL fell off a cliff that no-one saw coming.Peter SchiffGerald CelenteBob ChapmanJim RogersMax KeiserMarc FaberJim SinclairJames Dinesand...Vince Cable
Brown did a damn good job of sailing the economy away from boom and bust cycles for a decade and we STILL fell off a cliff that no-one saw coming.
BillyStubbsTears wrote:QuoteQuoteBrown did a damn good job of sailing the economy away from boom and bust cycles for a decade and we STILL fell off a cliff that no-one saw coming.Peter SchiffGerald CelenteBob ChapmanJim RogersMax KeiserMarc FaberJim SinclairJames Dinesand...Vince CableAll former left wingers?
BillyStubbsTears wrote:QuoteQuoteBrown did a damn good job of sailing the economy away from boom and bust cycles for a decade and we STILL fell off a cliff that no-one saw coming.Peter SchiffGerald CelenteBob ChapmanJim RogersMax KeiserMarc FaberJim SinclairJames Dinesand...Vince CablePoor choice of phrase from me. Of course, there are ALWAYS prophets predicting every possible outcome and some of them are bound to turn out to be correct. Some of the ones you name are professional Cassandras who have been predicting doom and disaster from the day they left their mother's tit. They were generally wrong in those predictions for most of their careers. But if they stuck to them long enough, they were bound to be proved right eventually by events. That's from the monkeys and typewriters school of prediciton though.What I should have said was that there was no obvious prediction of the recession among mainstream economic forecasters. The fascinating thing is how often the Labour Govt's predictions actually WERE shown to be correct over the 13 years they were in power. Time and again, the \"experts\" said that it was all going to go tits up. We were going to get hammered by the Russian crisis, the Argentine default, the East Asian crisis, the dot.com bubble bursting, the post-9/11 recession, the Eurozone slowdown etc, etc, etc. Forecasters on the far Left were gleefully predicting capitalist metldown. Forecasters on the Right couldn't conceive of a left-of-centre govt actually managing the economy well. On both sides, they regularly poured scorn on Govt forecasts of economic performance, and time and again, the Govt was proved correct. What we actually got was the longest period of stable economic growth for over 100 years, while the rest of the world's performance was going up and down like a brides knickers.If Brown didn't foresee the eventual recession, he was in good company - you'd struggle to find a mainstream economist, finance minister or central banker who did.Vince Cable made a name for himself by being seen to be some sort of genius who saw the problem. But his failure to see how Labour's policies would bring us out of recession (see earlier post) show that he hasn't got a 100% average either.
Glyn_Wigley wrote:QuoteSavvy wrote:QuoteNot sure I agree with the recession is an enivitable consequence of a capitalist economy, even Gordon Brown promised an end to boom and bust cyclical economy that had plagued the country year on year.Economic cycles and 'boom and bust' are not the same thing. Economic cycles happen, 'boom and bust' was the way of politically dealing with them.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RoZ7JXkv6_o
Savvy wrote:QuoteGlyn_Wigley wrote:QuoteSavvy wrote:QuoteNot sure I agree with the recession is an enivitable consequence of a capitalist economy, even Gordon Brown promised an end to boom and bust cyclical economy that had plagued the country year on year.Economic cycles and 'boom and bust' are not the same thing. Economic cycles happen, 'boom and bust' was the way of politically dealing with them.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RoZ7JXkv6_oWe got 'boom and bust' through years of politically imposed interest rates as a measure of trying to control inflation (and therefore the money supply). Boom and Bust happened over decades of crap Chancellors trying to heat up and cool down the economy either by too much, too little or at the wrong time, which is why we got 'booms' overheating the economy followed by 'busts' whent hey tried to cool them down again. Cycles happen as part of natural economics, imposing interests rates on a political basis aren't. That's why Brown immediately handing control of the Bank Rate over to the Bank Of England and out of the hands of politicians was one of the greatest economic decisions any Chancellor has made, and why the economy was going reasonably smoothly until the bankers cocked it up for everybody.Got a glib Youtube clip for this, or are you going to contribute something worthwhile?