domingo, 28 de fevereiro de 2010
TEc asks "Hero, villain or a victim of the global age?" - This is my answer
If one could briefly disengage Gordon Brown from Labour the question should get popped whether or not New Labour deserves to stay on in power.
For all his personal failings GB represents fairly well the renewed party that convincingly staged a comeback on a fresh ticket for Britain.
In the intervening 13 years - a long enough period for a government to leave a lasting imprint - has the UK, on balance, moved ahead?
The question may not seem easy to answer given the ups and downs of goverment on both domestic and foreign issues.
While there are a considerable number of positives, Labour's track-record is controversial on important matters at the very least.
Talking up the benefits of the global age doesn't automatically dispel the many losses and fears that have accompanied it.
If anything, again on balance, the UK is likely to have thus far incurred greater loss than gain to current globalisation.
Worst still is noting that the American-led financial meltdown caught out the UK at its weakest contrary to pre-recession common belief.
This goes some way explaining the UK being the last major developed economy to emerge from recession, a full-fledged 6-consecutive-quarter dip that resulted in a staggering 6.2% GDP contraction for 2009.
When a big mature economy shrinks that much and is left breathless with a massive budget deficit, a soaring public debt and a sizeable trade deficit and there is no clear indication as to a future path to growth questions loom largest than ever.
Gordon Brown may talk impressively about the global age - which is here to stay no doubt.He may even feel comfortable discussing global issues with his peers, to which there must be global answers.
Yes indeed some of them will only find resolution through collective across-the-world answers.
The problem is most of his peers appear to be doing the same in their countries which often leaves big voids in societies basically demanding local solutions to their local problems.
To my mind Gordon Brown is neither a hero nor a villain nor a victim of the global age.Not yet anyway.
He, like many of us, is only just beginning to mull over how to find a way forward in countries now looking spent to a worrisome degree.Following a decade of 'silly' make-believe worthless paper expansion.
Last year's GDP drop should be regarded as a painful adjustment to which more will follow simply to rein in public finances.
For all his personal failings GB represents fairly well the renewed party that convincingly staged a comeback on a fresh ticket for Britain.
In the intervening 13 years - a long enough period for a government to leave a lasting imprint - has the UK, on balance, moved ahead?
The question may not seem easy to answer given the ups and downs of goverment on both domestic and foreign issues.
While there are a considerable number of positives, Labour's track-record is controversial on important matters at the very least.
Talking up the benefits of the global age doesn't automatically dispel the many losses and fears that have accompanied it.
If anything, again on balance, the UK is likely to have thus far incurred greater loss than gain to current globalisation.
Worst still is noting that the American-led financial meltdown caught out the UK at its weakest contrary to pre-recession common belief.
This goes some way explaining the UK being the last major developed economy to emerge from recession, a full-fledged 6-consecutive-quarter dip that resulted in a staggering 6.2% GDP contraction for 2009.
When a big mature economy shrinks that much and is left breathless with a massive budget deficit, a soaring public debt and a sizeable trade deficit and there is no clear indication as to a future path to growth questions loom largest than ever.
Gordon Brown may talk impressively about the global age - which is here to stay no doubt.He may even feel comfortable discussing global issues with his peers, to which there must be global answers.
Yes indeed some of them will only find resolution through collective across-the-world answers.
The problem is most of his peers appear to be doing the same in their countries which often leaves big voids in societies basically demanding local solutions to their local problems.
To my mind Gordon Brown is neither a hero nor a villain nor a victim of the global age.Not yet anyway.
He, like many of us, is only just beginning to mull over how to find a way forward in countries now looking spent to a worrisome degree.Following a decade of 'silly' make-believe worthless paper expansion.
Last year's GDP drop should be regarded as a painful adjustment to which more will follow simply to rein in public finances.
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