Friday 14 March 2008

Are We Nearly There Yet?

Yes. Not long now before the headlines of the business pages transform into daily experiences and unaffordably high prices for everyday purchases; we are already exhausting obvious substitutions like cheaper cuts of meat, usually chicken, fresh fish almost never and then farmed salmon, avoiding salad products for frozen basic greens, bulking out meals with rice, pastas, pulses and bread. Already we pass Waitrose on the way to our local no-frills. We've stopped redecorating, and the domestic equipment is going to have to do another year, as will the curtains.

Clothes are separates, no longer the pretty summer dress from Fenwicks, the well cut jacket and skirt that costs a bit but will last for years, a silk or linen blouse; but 'tops' with jeans or machine washables.

There might be a 'do', an evening out with our local club, but otherwise we'll be eating at home and cooking from quite close to scratch, though the frozen vegetables are easier (as well as cheaper). And after supper? Once we're in for the evening, we usually stay - there's not a lot of going out for a stroll and a drink when it's cold, and the streets are hardly friendly, are they? We've cut back on the pub.

We thought we might remortgage to replace the car - the children's school seems to cost more and more, now they're bigger - and have a little holiday, but the bank doesn't want to know and the rates are through the roof; the fixed rate ends this year too.

The unemployment hasn't really started yet but the taxes just go up and up to pay for those already out. And the council's services are rubbish: the library closed half the time, old stock, you wouldn't think they'd heard of books, just videos; the swimming pool is usually given over to special groups and it's none too clean anyway. The new houses were built on the playing fields and sports pitches.

Dreary. Making do. That's how it feels at first. Then comes scary, as your house is worth less than your mortgage, and the rate on your savings is lower than inflation; then comes cold, as energy prices drop your living temperatures, and then comes no car and all the impossibilities of using a collapsed transport system; then getting ill from poorish diet and exposure to forgotten effects of poverty like rising levels of dirt.

Everybody's in the same boat. Precisely, so services are pushed until they break, which happens quite quickly as there's little elasticity inbuilt. And the socially more vulnerable, and more isolated, fail to cope entirely. People go mad, become criminal, burden families that are already under pressure with chronic illness, depression, and crises generated by infrastructure failure.

Life expectancy starts to fall as social cooperation shrinks, social order is first maintained by force and then degenerates anyway. Hope and reasonable aspiration fades for all but the toughest-minded, the best organised, those determined not to suffer the inner colllapse that comes with great loss.

And the loss is enormous; delivered by the ideological malevolence and, worse, the technical incompetence of the last 11 years of New Labour.

10 comments:

Sackerson said...

Very vivid, HG. I read Helen Forrester's "Twopence to cross the Mersey" and she said when you're really poor you need three things: newspapers, soap and razor blades. Don't suppose it'll get that bad again, except through self-neglect by the drug-addled underclass.

Thought you were in Italy?

hatfield girl said...

You must be right that there will have to be huge debt write-offs and reschedulings and general over looking of missed payments (if I grasped your recent post correctly), otherwise a lot of people will be standing outside in the rain Those photos of boarded up housing in the United States amaze me. Where have the people gone who used to live in the houses? And how will people here ever get out of debt with falling prices yet debts fixed at the top of the market?

(I am in Italy again now; after the last budget).

Sackerson said...

I understand (hazily) that in Leviticus 25, it says that debts should be forgiven in the year of Jubilee (every 50 years); what a nice tradition to revive. And that was at a time when the lender couldn't mutiply his capital by lending what he didn't have.

You're an economics buff: would it not be a boost to economic growth? Ot would it simply provoke a war with our foreign creditors? Is there a sword for this Gordian knot?

Nick Drew said...

I was in Russia in the mid '90s: for many, it was clearly as you describe

(you could by then get anything you wanted - if you could pay - so rationing was by price, and the long queues one saw were people who had collected empty bottles and cans, waiting to hand them over for a few coppers each.)

We know the sort of politicians these poor folk vote for, ultimately ...

Anonymous said...

Undoubtedly debt forgiveness would encourage growth, S., but we would have to come to terms with our old friend Moral Hazard.

More wreckless debt would be encouraged.

And either the forgiven debt is worthless, so forgiving it costs nothing and makes no difference, or its market value would have to be repaid by the state, creditors could not have the diminished value of their credit destroyed without destroying the credit market system. The effect would be no better than other forms of government expenditure.

hatfield girl said...

Quite a lot of people are not having much joy in life already, from looking about while in London. St Pancras looked good but hardly any people, not the Hauptbahnhof is it.

Where are all the people was a constant wonder; walking through Covent Garden on the way home on Sunday lunchtime there wasn't a decent pubful, so we had a delicious croque monsieur and framboise near the Freemasons - but empty.
Yet a 50 square metres third floor walk up costs £475,000, over an off licence.
Camden is auctioning off its Georgian Bloomsbury housing stock, saying it's too expensive to refurbish yet every terrace, every house is grabbed for restoration for the Olympic media, on government funding - which leads to even fewer people.
There seem to be two, wholly separated financial worlds and political agendas but I can't quite see it clearly. In Germany it has cost a European fortune to reabsorb the East and its people; in England it's as if they are being pushed and pulled out of where they aren't wanted and dumped, trapped by poverty and debt, where no one wants to go.

I was looking at the data on Russia ND, you confirm what the numbers show. There too, there was this huge privatisation of social capital into the hands of a small class of politically-linked elites, by, effectively, theft.

Sen. C.R.O'Blene said...

Hellfire Hats...I'm supposed to be on holiday from tonight...

Hits the spot this one - but they'll never listen!

Sackerson said...

Caronte, I sure wish I understood more. But if every pound of deposit is turned into £10 of loans, then reversing the trend means that for £10 cancelled, you only have to find £1 to compensate creditors? Time to bankrupt some of the banks?

hatfield girl said...

What have you planned for the holidays Sroblene? With all that lovely time to use as you choose.

Electro-Kevin said...

Dear Hatfield Girl,

This piece moved me somewhat. As I've said before you are a most gifted and observant commentator.

I'm feeling a little smug having been saying for years that this 'boom' was yet another bubble and a great reckonning would be the result. I take solace in the fact that I hope we will become a more frugal people and grateful for simple things. Gratitude is at the heart of true happiness and we become dulled to gratitude in times of plenty - this is why poor sand boys are often so cheerful. I also hope that we become more humble and our manners are restored. I'd be happier poor among good people than rich among bad - we won't be poor among bad people for long as we will not tolerate it and will have nothing to lose in fighting for change.

Hope - another ingredient of happiness.

Where did the people go in the American housing bust ? Probably back to mum and dad. In the UK they haven't factored the spare bedrooms in parental housing into the potential contraction for property demand - nor the demand for single bedroom lodgings. When this recession hits I think there could well be a property slump to add to our woes.

Don't bother visiting my blog, HG - I've been failing to meet my abismally low standards of late. Good readership levels for some reason though.

Yours,

Kevin