Things Must be Bad, Politicians are Telling the Truth
Sep 2nd, 2008 | By John Stepek | Category: International InvestingThings must be getting bad. Politicians are resorting to telling the truth. Chancellor Alistair Darling caused something of a stir at the weekend by admitting that economic conditions are “arguably the worst they’ve been in 60 years.” The financial crisis will be “more profound and long-lasting than people thought,” he said in an interview with The Guardian.
Of course, Mr Darling does have to make the rather embarrassing admission that his earlier forecast for 2-2.5% economic growth this year, was so off-the-scale wrong as to be in the realms of surreal fantasy. So it’s best if he tries to look as if he knows what he’s talking about now.
And it’s hardly breaking news. House prices have already fallen faster and harder than at any time since records began. Anyone who’s still trying to compare this favourably to the 1990s recession is way behind the times.
But credit where credit’s due. Mr Darling may finally be facing up to reality. Shame his colleagues aren’t quite there yet…
Darling is finally facing up to the harsh reality
I’m no great fan of Alistair Darling, but I have to say he came across well in his “controversial” Guardian interview at the weekend. Granted, the paper was never going to give him a hard time. But to hear a member of the Cabinet dispense with the Orwellian New Labour-speak and just admit things were awful was refreshing.
That said, I’m not daft. I suspect Mr Darling’s attempts to tell it “straight” and play up the image of the hard-working but slightly naïve politician, who doesn’t quite understand the world of spin, is all part of some devious Gordon Brown election strategy. You know the kind of thing I mean. “Who do you want running the country? I, prudent Gordon Brown, with my straight-talking down-to-earth team, who tell it like it is? Or smarmy professional politicians like Miliband and Cameron?” Call me cynical, but you don’t survive in the Cabinet as long as Mr Darling has without knowing how to play the game.
But still, compare Mr Darling’s blunt appraisal of the British economy with the defensive gibberish spouted by Hazel Blears, the communities secretary. Ms Blears told The Times that “we know things are tough and understand that people are worried. But Britain’s economy is fundamentally strong.”
This is just patronising rubbish, and voters are rightly irritated by it. She may not realise it, but she’s effectively saying: “you’re all panicking over nothing. The economy’s basically fine and you’re just stupid people who are taken in by all these nasty newspaper headlines.”
Source: Things Must be Bad, Politicians are Telling the Truth
John Stepek is Deputy Editor of the UK-based financial weekly MoneyWeek. He is also the editor of daily investment email Money Morning UK. John graduated from Strathclyde University in 1996. He has worked for a number of financial magazines and newsletters including Families in Business, Shares Magazine and The Sunday Times.