Here’s another scouting report as I clear off my desk for the first week of March, 2011. There’s so much going on right now that it’s quite difficult to keep it all arranged.
We begin with a rather odd admission by the Governor of the Bank of England that he’s puzzled by a lack of citizen outrage, look at Norway’s drilling dry spell, and end with the Fuzzy Number known as the unemployment rate.
King says living standards may never recover from the crisis
March 2, 2011
The Governor of the Bank of England warned yesterday that living standards may never recover from the financial crisis and that households were only just starting to feel the full impact of bankers’ mistakes.
Mervyn King told MPs that ordinary people were not to blame for the pain ahead and that he was surprised there had not been more public fury.
“It is not like an ordinary recession where you lose output and get it back quickly,” the Governor said when asked if the country would ever recover from a squeeze on living standards on a scale not seen since the 1920s.
“You may not get it back for many years, if ever, and that is a big long-run loss of living standards for all people in this country.”
Mr King said that unlike previous recessions, the economy had not needed a shake-up to get industries out of state control or weaken union power and that the people bearing the most pain are blameless.
“They can’t look at this and say, ‘Okay, something was wrong that has to be put right’ and they don’t get bonuses on the scale of people in the financial services sector,” he told the House of Commons Treasury Committee.
“The cost of this crisis is only now being felt. I’m surprised that the degree of anger hasn’t been greater.”
Comments:
Wow, those are some exceptionally blunt views from the Governor of the Bank of England.