Wokingham News

I am a natural optimist. I like to see the opportunity and the possibilities in life. The background as we travel through the end of the old year and into the new is not auspicious. The news background threatens worse to come on jobs, company failures, house prices and much else. Just to make it all worse, violent war breaks out in the Middle East.

Last year I urged the authorities to try to stave off recession. I explained how “If the authorities cut interest rates and make more cash available to the banks we can avoid too sharp a downturn.”

This year I am forced to write about how they could limit the damage of what is likely to be a severe downturn in the UK.

It took them nine months to recognise the dangers of the high interest rates and tight money they were offering in 2008. All too late in the day they started to shower the banks with cash and bring the interest rates clattering down. These changes will have an impact, but not in the early months of 2009. The authorities seem to have forgotten that it takes a year or more for changes in interest rates and changes to money market liquidity to work through the system. In the meantime there is the remaining problem that the banks themselves are still weak, need to write off more from their assets, and are under regulatory orders to strengthen their balance sheets at the moment of greatest difficulty.

The UK authorities could start to get a grip on their banks, and start to make better decisions about helping nurse them back to health so the wheels of borrowing can move the vehicles of commerce again. We need a government to understand that their regulatory and monetary policies need to reinforce each other, not struggle against each other, a government which finds a way for banks to pass on some of the cash it is now tipping into the system, and then controls the amount of that cash, before we start up another damaging inflationary cycle.

Last year at this time I went hoarse asking them to cut interest rates immediately. This year I say the rates are low enough. The problem now rests elsewhere. Indeed it is savers now who need the better deal, and I would like the government to help them.

They could afford to do so, and to lower taxes on income and jobs, if only they would forgo their foolish cut in VAT. We need now intelligent and affordable tax cuts, rather than clumsy and expensive ones which are not going to lift us out of recession.

I wish you all a happy and prosperous New Year. It’s the year when savers are asked to share the misery of the borrowers, as we continue to sift our way through the debris of the Credit Crunch. I just hope you and yours have jobs that survive and enough cash to see you through.