You are reading a single comment by @greentricky and its replies. Click here to read the full conversation.
  • The British economy is in a generation-long slough of despond, a slow-burning economic catastrophe. Real household disposable income per capita has barely increased for 15 years.

    This is not normal. Since 1948, this measure of spending power reliably increased in the UK, doubling every 30 years. It was about twice as high in 1978 as in 1948 and was in touching distance of doubling again by 2008, before the financial crisis intervened. Today, it’s back at those pre-crisis levels.

    It’s worth lingering on this point because it is so extraordinary. Had the pre-crisis trend continued, the typical Brit would by now be 40 per cent richer. Instead, no progress has been made at all. No wonder the Institute for Fiscal Studies is now talking of a second lost decade.

    https://www.ft.com/content/ef830f78-75ee-4b91-a48e-04defa0f96d4

  • This is not normal.

    Since 1948, this measure of spending power reliably increased in the UK, doubling every 30 years. It was about twice as high in 1978 as in 1948 and was in touching distance of doubling again by 2008

    Unfortunately, I feel the need to ask... what if this 60 years, when charted amongst the preceeding, let's say 1200 years, simply wasn't normal, but was a blip?

About

Avatar for greentricky @greentricky started