terça-feira, 30 de março de 2010
TEc "Small island for sale" The UK's long slide to services
The Economist reads as unrepentant and as uncompromising as ever where it concerns the workings of a purely free market economy.
The free flow of capital and goods - and assorted consequences implied - must under no circumstance get checked by any entity other than the marketplace itself.
Well, 30 years on since the advent of this strand of forthright liberal capitalist thinking the time has come to evaluate the results.
Has the UK economy and society strengthened during this period?
If the "truth is rather more complicated", which I certainly agree with, then it should rest on a balanced, unbiased view allowing for an objective and conclusive analysis to be made.
In relation to its peers - will reinstate the falling G7 grouping of rich countries - the UK as an industrialised developed large economy appears vulnerable to an extent.Notwithstanding the fact that it still boasts a powerful oil industry as a producer country.
Other G7 countries such as the US and Canada are major oil producers too.Indeed both are well above UK production.While the US, despite massive production, still imports over half its consumption, Canada produces far more than it consumes.
UK oil production is believed to have peaked already, having made the country nearly self-sufficient for several years.North Sea oil provided the UK economy with a relevant cushion through a period that witnessed the demise of a significant chunk of the manufacturing base.
To my mind there's two lines - which I will quote - from an otherwise accurate and insightful article that best sums up legitimate worries:
"The biggest loss to the business is the disappearance of a long-term vision, with the emphasis switching to short-term financial results."
One after another British business has fallen prey to this logic as if it were an historical inevitability.Now compounded and accelerated by a lawless globalisation.
It is yet to be proved if this will lead to winners only in the not too distant future...
Time will tell but I can fully understand the moaning and objective sense of loss many Britishers have felt over the years.
It is about much more than moaning.
The free flow of capital and goods - and assorted consequences implied - must under no circumstance get checked by any entity other than the marketplace itself.
Well, 30 years on since the advent of this strand of forthright liberal capitalist thinking the time has come to evaluate the results.
Has the UK economy and society strengthened during this period?
If the "truth is rather more complicated", which I certainly agree with, then it should rest on a balanced, unbiased view allowing for an objective and conclusive analysis to be made.
In relation to its peers - will reinstate the falling G7 grouping of rich countries - the UK as an industrialised developed large economy appears vulnerable to an extent.Notwithstanding the fact that it still boasts a powerful oil industry as a producer country.
Other G7 countries such as the US and Canada are major oil producers too.Indeed both are well above UK production.While the US, despite massive production, still imports over half its consumption, Canada produces far more than it consumes.
UK oil production is believed to have peaked already, having made the country nearly self-sufficient for several years.North Sea oil provided the UK economy with a relevant cushion through a period that witnessed the demise of a significant chunk of the manufacturing base.
To my mind there's two lines - which I will quote - from an otherwise accurate and insightful article that best sums up legitimate worries:
"The biggest loss to the business is the disappearance of a long-term vision, with the emphasis switching to short-term financial results."
One after another British business has fallen prey to this logic as if it were an historical inevitability.Now compounded and accelerated by a lawless globalisation.
It is yet to be proved if this will lead to winners only in the not too distant future...
Time will tell but I can fully understand the moaning and objective sense of loss many Britishers have felt over the years.
It is about much more than moaning.
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