Monthly Archives: January 2009

More than just money

viyellawedgwood-logowoolworths-logoToday the administrators were put into Viyella, a couple of days after the collapse of Waterford Wedgwood and the  day after the last Woolworths stores, including the one in Colwyn Bay, closed for good.

These are brands that are truly part of the fabric of our country; together and individually, they have contributed to what it means to be British. 

How many more like them will disappear before this appalling recession has run its course?  And how much poorer, in terms of heritage and identity, will our country be?

Well done, Conwy

wind-farmI was extremely pleased and relieved to hear that Conwy County Councillors today resolved to seek counsel’s opinion on the merits of an application for judicial review of the decision to grant consent for the development of the proposed Gwynt y Môr wind farm.  The development, if it proceeds, will be the second biggest offshore wind farm in the world; it will consequently have an enormous impact on the North Wales coast, its residents and its economy. 

The Secretary of State’s decision letter, which I have read, is a complex document and will need to be considered by specialist counsel.  It may be, of course, that counsel will conclude that there is no scope for judicial review; however, given the importance of the issue to the people of this area, it is right to seek legal advice.

The councillors of Conwy have done the right thing in the interests of their electors and I applaud them for it.

From the front line

Marks and Spencer has today issued its Christmas trading statement, showing that, in the 13 weeks to 27 December, its UK like-for-like sales fell by 7.1%.  The company has announced the closure of two of its department stores and 25 Simply Food outlets.  Over 1,200 employees will be made redundant.  Its pension scheme will also become less generous.

Marks’s executive chairman, Sir Stuart Rose, who appeared on the Today programme this morning, said that he expected the current “challenging” economic conditions to continue for at least the next twelve months and that the cuts were necessary to maintain the strength of the business.

The chief executive of Next, Simon Wolfson, who also appeared on Today, said that the 2½ per cent cut in VAT had been a “missed opportunity”; in worrying economic times, people would feel happier if the money was put directly into their pockets.  The cut was irrelevant at a time when retailers were already offering substantial discounts.

Wolfson went on to say that the big problem in the sector was the unavailability of bank credit; the banks were being asked to repay the Government at high interest rates, but were at the same time being told to lend at low rates; this was unsustainable.

Neither Rose nor Wolfson thought that the retail sector was “facing Armageddon”, but both agreed 2009 would be a tough year.

The interview was an excellent reflection of how retailers are feeling in the current economic climate; I do hope that people were listening at the Treasury and DBERR.

Rewarding prudence

David Cameron’s announcement yesterday that the next Conservative Government will abolish income tax on basic-rate taxpayers’ savings and increase pensioners’ personal allowance by £2,000 has met with predictable hostility from Labour.  Yvette Cooper, Chief Secretary to the Treasury, appeared on BBC News last night to denounce the policy as one that would not help most pensioners and would take money out of the economy when more spending was needed.

I don’t know how many pensioners Miss Cooper speaks to, but I can say from my own experience that she is entirely wrong.  At one of the many church carol services I attended before Christmas, several older people approached me, unprompted, to say how worried they were about getting through the winter, as they watched the return from their savings plummeting.  They will undoubtedly be pleased by what David Cameron had to say.  Gordon Lishman, director general of Age Concern, has also welcomed the announcement.

As Chancellor, Gordon Brown caused untold damage to the interests of a whole generation of pensioners when he abolished advance corporation tax relief for pension funds.  At least £5 billion a year, which should have been applied for the benefit of pensioners, has been diverted by Labour to other, often wasteful, items of public expenditure.

Now pensioners see the value of their taxed savings eroded to the extent that, before long, they will receive virtually no income from them and will have to resort to capital.  These people feel betrayed, and with good reason, because they have been.

Cameron is therefore entirely right to promise to help an important section of the community, who take the view, quite rightly, that for all his rhetoric about prudence, Gordon Brown has rewarded theirs with a kick in the teeth.

Tony’s tab

blairThe Daily Mail today carries a typically incandescent piece about former Prime Minister Tony Blair, now international Middle East peace envoy, who failed to show up in Israel until last Saturday, long after the disaster of Gaza had begun.

According to the Mail, Blair’s late arrival was due to the fact that he was holidaying with his family; his spokesman, however, hotly denies any lack of urgency on his boss’s part and says that he has been “working tirelessly” behind the scenes “since day one”.

Whatever the truth, I was rather perturbed to read that Blair’s office space in Jerusalem, which apparently comprises the entire fourth floor of the “exclusive” American Colony hotel, is costing the British taxpayer “half a million pounds a year, and more when Mr Blair and his entourage are in town”.

Blair is the appointee of the Middle East peace “Quartet”, comprising the UN, EU, Russia and the USA.  One might have thought, in the circumstance,  that his considerable expenses would be met by those four entities equally; why should the  British taxpayer pick up the tab?

Shades of meaning

The Observer carries an extensive interview with Gordon Brown today.

In it, he speaks of his intention to create “probably” 100,000 new jobs “over the next period of time” in a variety of capital projects, including school and hospital repairs, digital infrastructure and alternative energy. 

He is, however, still apparently in denial over his own role in the failure of UK banking regulation:

“Do you have no regrets, no feeling that there is anything you could have done in the last 10 years that would have better positioned us for this storm?”

“The truth is that not even the heads of some of the major financial institutions knew what was actually happening and what the risks they were taking were. And I am certainly angry at the way some of our financial institutions and some of the world’s financial institutions have been run. Even with the new system of regulation that we put in, the Financial Services Authority, it was not possible for them to understand and see what was actually happening in this shadow banking system.”

The reply appears to amount to an acknowledgment that the system of regulation that Labour put in was unfit for purpose.  That ought, one might have thought, trigger the need for an apology; but nowhere in the interview does the word “sorry” appear.

The phrase “shadow banking system” is also interesting, connoting an illicit, not to say criminal, state of affairs that no regulator could ever have been  expected to unearth.  That, of course, is nonsense.  In the case of Northern Rock, for example, Mervyn King has already related that the Bank of England was fully aware of what was going on, but was unable to intervene because of the regulatory system.

Nevertheless, “shadow banking system” sounds gratifyingly sinister and will probably join “global” in the Labour lexicon “over the next period of time”.

Bitter pill

Judgment will soon be delivered on the flagship of the Government’s financial stimulus package, the temporary 2½ per cent cut in the rate of VAT. 

Early indications do not look too promising.  Debenhams, Marks and Spencer, Sainsbury and Next will update the market next week on their Christmas trading, with many analysts expecting poor figures, as the impact of the downturn on what is traditionally the busiest retail period is revealed.

The comments of Credit Suisse, reported in today’s Telegraph are particularly stark:

“This is the first time in our recent recollection that there has been such widespread breakdown in market pricing discipline.

“For this reason we will not be surprised if Christmas does not ‘happen’ in a profit sense this year after many years of retailers being saved by last-minute demand for less heavily discounted products.”

The VAT cut  therefore looks very likely to have failed.  Indeed, David Cameron and, today, the Lib Dems’ Nick Clegg have said as much.  So, indeed, have independent commentators, such as Rhys Williams of Arbuthnot Securities:

 “It was operationally difficult for retailers to implement, and in terms of a demand driver it had zero impact.”

It is, in truth, hardly surprising that consumers are reluctant to spend, given the general decline in confidence throughout the economy.  With businesses unable to access credit, people are fearful of what the future holds.

Before confidence can trickle down to consumers, the logjam preventing the flow of credit to businesses will have to be cleared.  At present, however, the omens are not good.  A Bank of England survey just published has revealed that, in spite of Government threats and entreaties, lenders further reduced the amount of credit available in the last three months of 2008 and warned that they planned to continue to pare back.

Alistair Darling is rapidly running out of options.  The Bank of England is likely to cut base rate next week, but the deep cuts already made have had little or no effect.  Suggestions now include injecting yet more cash into the economy – likely to result in a further decline in sterling – or purchasing toxic assets from the banks.

The Conservative proposal of setting up a national loan guarantee scheme has not yet been taken up by the Government.  This seems perplexing, given that its cost would be relatively moderate (and it is only in the context of the Government’s stratospheric borrowing plans that £50 billion could possibly be considered moderate), and given also that it has been welcomed by business bodies such as the CBI and the FSB. 

The obstacle would seem to be purely political.  Gordon Brown has been attempting since last autumn to portray the Conservatives as the “no nothing” party, in contrast to his own globe-bestriding hyperactivity.  If he were to adopt the Tory plans, Gordon would tacitly be acknowledging that all his sound and fury over the last three months really did signify nothing.

That would truly be a bitter pill, but, given the continuing downward trajectory of the British economy, Gordon may soon be left with no option but to pinch his nose and swallow it.

Lucky Gordon

gordon-brownThe Telegraph today reports that, at a question and answer session with students at Yale University, Tony Blair put down the ten years of economic growth under his premiership to nothing more than good fortune:

“It is true that we had 10 years of record growth when I was Prime Minister. I have, unfortunately, come to the conclusion that it was luck.”

There has been some suggestion that the comment was intended deliberately to infuriate Gordon Brown, who was, of course, Chancellor throughout Blair’s tenure in Downing Street.  A spokesman for Blair has, however,  been quick to explain the remark away as a “self-deprecating joke in response to a comment praising the Labour government’s handling of the economy while he was Prime Minister”.

However, just as Blair never “did God”, neither did he ever do much in the way of self-deprecation.  His answer, in fact, did Gordon Brown a considerable favour, because, if he had been completely frank, he would have replied along the lines of:

“Well, what happened was that Gordon ramped up the economy by allowing a massive consumer boom to develop, based upon huge levels of personal indebtedness  and a seemingly unending  surge in house prices.  The bubble was bound to burst, and of course it has.  I’m just grateful that it didn’t happen on my watch and that Gordon has to carry the can for it.”

If Blair had said that, Brown would have had real reason to be annoyed.  As it stands, he may even gain the sobriquet “Lucky Gordon”, which has a nice, jaunty ring to it.  And jauntiness is one characteristic seldom previously attributed to  our  deeply lugubrious Prime Minister.

Hoar frost

hoarfrostWe took a walk with the dog yesterday along a local lane called, for some long forgotten reason, Ffordd Bwgan, or Goblin’s Road. 

On an autumn evening, when the sun is sinking and the leaves spiralling down, the ancient trees overhanging the rutted, unmade track certainly impart a tangible other-worldly atmosphere.  But yesterday, in the cold, clear winter sunshine, it was very different.  Though it was late afternoon, and the sun had been up for several hours, the ferns and ivy in the shade of the old drystone walls were still thick with a sparkling shell of hoar frost. The hard, frozen ground glistened under our feet.

This year will be tough, there’s no doubting it.  And it is trite to say that the best things in life are free.  But it’s true, nonetheless.

Sometimes, when the big picture looks bleak, a lot of comfort can be gained from contemplating the small things.  And there, sometimes, can be found real joy.

The gate of the year

Tipp-ex

A happy New Year to all readers of this blog!

2008 was, beyond reasonable question, a pretty miserable year; I’m sure very few of us will be sorry to see it go.

The problem is that 2009 doesn’t look as if it’s going to be any better; if anything, it will probably be considerably worse, with more bankruptcies, business failures and home repossessions. The Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development forecasts that 600,000 workers face redundancy during the year, with as many as 1,000,000 jobs likely to disappear during the course of the downturn.  It’s probably going to be a pretty bleak twelve months.

Gordon Brown, however, still seems pretty upbeat, notwithstanding the gloomy economic news that pours in from all quarters. In fact, he appears to be contentedly locked into his I-saved-the-world mode.   In his New Year message, the Prime Minister declares that 2008 will be remembered as the year in which “the old era of unbridled free market dogma was finally ushered out” and messianically pledges to work with President-elect Obama to create “a new progressive era” across the entire globe.

All this is very odd.  Mr Brown is behaving very much like a man who has suddenly been teleported to planet Earth from Mars – or perhaps, in his case, Krypton – and encountered an economic system so profoundly, fundamentally alien that he is unable to comprehend it.  The inconvenient fact that it is the same Mr Brown who has been personally responsible over the last eleven years for the oversight, not to say encouragement, of the “unbridled free market” in Britain has been neatly Tipp-exed out.

So today we apparently find ourselves not only at the gate of the year, but at the very dawn of a new golden age of Brownian statist, interventionist economics, in which the unbridled free market will be replaced by massive, unbridled Government borrowing, with little heed for the financial wellbeing of future generations or, indeed, for anything else beyond the next general election.   Most people I speak to – and I have spoken to a lot this Christmas – find that extremely worrying.

Anyway, welcome to 2009, whatever it may bring.  Let us prepare for the worst, but hope for the best.  I look forward to your company throughout the year.