Wednesday, 17 June 2009

False Dawns and New Labour

There are two images, two instant visualisations being used in the UK media at the moment to reassure and stabilise. 'Green shoots of the economic recovery', and 'the economy has hit the bottom'. Both draw their force from the habits of the human mind in using metaphor models for generalised understanding which are modified more and more extensively as the object of thought and investigation is narrowed, and the skills and inputs of the thinker increase. But when we are in unfamiliar territory we grab ourselves a paradigm.

Green shoots is appealing for its Spring-like qualities of rebirth, the long winter ending, the results of wise husbandry available from the sunlit uplands within so short a time - green shoots become golden harvests within a year. Green shoots looks backwards with approval to clearing and tilling, seed corn at the ready followed by watering and fertilising, hard work yes, short term restraint embodied in the gestation period, but then forward to earned reward and the return to plenty - the natural (conveniently short) cycle, in this case economic cycle, of events.

The economy hitting the bottom gives encouraging notions of rebound, cannot get any worsiness, and while it's been tough, will be tough for a while, we have not suffered all that badly and now things are on the way back up. Yes, there may be a V shape or even a W shape - how sophisticated to think in those terms - but the bottom is not so bad. No, we would not like to be bumping along it like Japan - gosh you do know your stuff don't you? - but that outcome we understand and can avoid under the guidance of our knowledgeable and powerful economic operators, most particularly as the United Kingdom is blessed with the brightest and the best of these.

Such powerful imagery, such a relief not to have to think in devilish detail.

How does it feel when we imagine deforestation's arid deadland and plains stripped bare for destructive cultivations. Higher ground marred by torrential winter downfalls followed by mudslides stripping ever more earth from the rock. Plains plagued by howling dust storms harrying retreating groups of beaten creatures, humans among them, without fuel, without water resources, eating and burning what is needed to re-establish any ecology or even immediate food supply. And after the landscape is hosed briefly with flood and downpour, green shoots for as long as it takes for the aridity to reassert itself.

Or imagine the bottom as the continental shelf with the edge of the shelf dropping off into the continental slope and beyond this slope to the abyssal plain with even deeper trenches cutting through it. When the bottom isn't there to bounce off, even visualising the recovery as a W is to assume that we get back to the surface and can breathe.

Better economists than Angels repeatedly state that they do not understand what is happening, nor can they project any reliable future scenario. So if you do not want to be taken in and find yourselves starring in the Grapes of Wrath or 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, make your own arrangements, and make sure you have some measure of real control over your life.

2 comments:

Sue said...

I must admit I do have a good laugh when I see "green shoots" and "number of unemployed reaches 1997 levels" on the same page!

I don't think we've reached the "bottom" yet, but they can say that for months!

Elby the Beserk said...

BOM has a splendid post today on Brown the liar. Why, one wonders, is it deemed acceptable by politicos to lie and be lied to? Slowly the MSM are beginning to get antsy about it - witness Fraser Nelson's question of Brown at the press conference after the PLP meeting, but it has taken them a long time.

Regarding unemployment, Brown has an absolute whopper he likes to pull out at PMQs. Whilst the BBC was announcing an increase in unemployment around 230,000 for the preceding three months, Brown had the gall to say that 200,000 people A MONTH are getting new jobs from job centres.

In any other business you'd be sacked on the spot for lying like that.

I'd love Cameron to call him a liar to his face at PMQs. At this point, protocol is less important than bearding the bastard.