Max
Keiser's unpleasant facts on UK economy
Max
Keiser deliberes some unpleasant truthes on the state of the UK
economy. Questioned also by Mary Riddell from The Daily Telegraph and
Craig Woodhouse from The Sun newspapers.
Recorded
from BBC Daily Politics, 25 January 2013.
Britain
is experiencing 'worse slump than during Great Depression'
Britain's
recent economic performance is the worst since records began in the
pre-Victorian era, experts said today, apart from the two immediate
post-war slumps
25
January, 2013
Ministers
today admitted Britain is facing "very, very grave difficulties"
after figures showed the economy did not grow at all in 2012.
Both
George Osborne, the Chancellor, and Danny Alexander, the Chief
Secretary to the Treasury, said they do not underestimate the scale
of the challenge but insisted the Goverment is on a "path of
repairing our public finances".
Despite
their optimism, City analysts warned that the economy is still "in
crisis", more than four years after the financial crash of
autumn 2008.
Economists
from the Royal Bank of Scotland said the last four years have
produced the worst economic performance in a non post-war period
since records started being collected in the 1830s.
Attempt
to ease pressure on final salary pensions 'too little, too late' 25
Jan 2013
Stephen
Boyle, head of group economics at the Royal Bank of Scotland, said
the last time the economy was so bad was immediately after World War
One and World War Two, when GDP fell in double digits.
"Those
aside, 2008-12 fall was bigger than any since before Victoria
ascended the throne," he said.
"It's
the worst economic performance since at least 1830, outside of
post-war demobilisations," he told The Daily Telegraph. "It's
worse than the 1920s, it's worse than the Great Depression."
He
said the economy has been "heading this way for a long time"
because of the scale of the problems that came to a head in the 2008
financial crash.
"When
you get a downturn that's rooted in very high levels of indebtedness
and stress in the financial system, history tells us that you get
recessions that are much deeper and longer, and recoveries that are
much weaker," he said.
The
top economist at RBS, which is mostly owned by the Government, said
it is difficult to recover when much of the world is facing similar
problems.
"It's
the scale of what happened in 2008 but also the build-up to that,"
he said. "Compared with other recessions [like in the 1980s and
1990s], this is happening all over the world. There's not a quick and
easy way to export your way out of this."
However,
Mr Boyle said there are "limited options" for the
Chancellor to "let up on austerity".
"The
Bank of England has made it clear that it would expect interest rates
to rise if the Government let off on austerity," he said.
"There
is an opportuninty for very modest fiscal expansion - more spending
or tax cuts - but the Government has to balance that against what
might happen to interests."
Official
figures released at 9.30am showed the UK economy did not grow at all
last year, because of the poor results for the last three months of
2012.
Experts
said the economy shrank in the final quarter as Britain's
manufacturers suffered their worst year since the financial crisis.
Tony
Dolphin, chief economist at the IPPR, said there would not
necessarily be a triple-dip recession but the economy remains in
crisis.
"We
will not know for sure whether the economy is back in recession for
another three months," he said. "And even then, history
suggests there is always a chance that the GDP figures will be
revised and that any recession will be subsequently eradicated from
the record.
"What
we do know, however, is that the economy is facing a triple crisis:
stagnation, debt and imbalance."
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.