February 17, 2009
Recession or Depression
Story link: Recession or Depression
The outlook is bleak for one main reason. If the Government are under estimating the impact of the recession by so much, how can they produce an action plan that will stimulate the economy throughout the recession?
The purpose of this analysis is to map out to the trend of the UK recession for 2009 and 2010 in terms of depth, the bottom and the potential recovery. The most recently released GDP data shows that the UK economy actually did fall off of the edge of a cliff during the fourth quarter of 2008 by contracting by a shocking 1.5% GDP. This compares against the governments recent forecast for 2% GDP contraction for the whole of 2009 which paints a picture of gross under estimation of the actual extent of the degree of economic contraction that is taking place at this time, and hence the adoption of the easy going terminology of “Quantative Easing” to hide the truth of money printing on a scale that could bankrupt Britain, the evidence of which has been played out in the currency markets with sterling’s fall to a 23 year low against the dollar, a fall of over 30% in barely 6 months.
The fourth quarter GDP crash of 1.5% is far higher than expected and explains why the government panicked as evident by the deep interest rate cuts from 5% to 1% in just 4 months. The rate cuts are in addition to the £1 trillion banking sector bailout liabilities. The rate of contraction at 1.5% per quarter implies an annualised collapse in the UK economy of 6% which would amount to loss of national income of £72 billion, against which the government has so far committed £40 billion in the form of tax cuts, industry support and stimulus packages. However the deviation of the trend for 2.5% growth per annum puts the gap at an additional £30 billion per annum.
