I was a client for many years but had to terminate that client relationship when residence in the USA became highly likely! Very happy with the service and advice provided – extremely so! (I have no relationship at any level with that firm now!).
Anyway, David publishes what he calls Contrary View from time to time. His latest is reproduced with his permission.
No. 074 9th August 2010 A statistical impression
Over the last few weeks a number of graphs have appeared showing how the economy has apparently picked up to where it was before the credit crunch started. Such graphs invariably show a ‘U’ shaped curve demonstrating perfect recovery. This is the impression easily formed by a glance at such a graph, but it is the wrong assumption to make.
National Statistics reports Gross Domestic Product (GDP) as two different measures, both estimates showing a decline in GDP. Here are the latest figures (estimated), taken from their website last week:
3rd Qtr 2008 Index 102.6
2nd Qtr 2010 Index 99.0
This GDP index shows a permanent loss of output.
Detailed figures are also available (Table 1.02 of the UK economic accounts) and on the same estimating basis, seasonally adjusted, report:
3rd Qtr 2008 GDP £340,780 million
2nd Qtr 2010 GDP £328,766 million
No matter how you look at these figures, there has been a permanent loss of output of just over 3.5% in this period.
This loss of output means less work, so debts are more difficult to service. Why do the press produce graphs showing an apparently perfect recovery? The answer is that the graphs are taken from the National Statistics press release, for example on 23rd July 2010. The graph that is offered is a rate of change, not the level of output, and may simply have been copied without consideration of the impression formed.
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As I mentioned in a comment to a regular reader of Learning from Dogs:
To me, sufficiently old to have watched Governments for some decades now, the most striking thing about the present circumstances is the terrible decline in political integrity.