Rorschach":2tz6upid said:
You make a lot of good points there Terry.
I would add though, while a lot of these industries might be discretionary or "luxury", their existence not only adds a lot to social well being for (some) people but they also employ people and create tax revenue that pays for those essential services that we all need.
Using your example of cutting your own lawn is a good one but I would say it is a little more complicated than that. Changing the example to one that works for this forum. Lets say many members here do not go out for entertainment, pay for movies or buy mass produced furniture. Instead they spend their leisure time making things in their sheds. That is not a loss or zero gain to the economy because they are not spending on those luxury goods. Instead they are buying materials, tools, new or secondhand. Keeping companies like Axminster in business relies heavily, maybe almost entirely on hobbyists. Everyone contributes in their own way, one persons essential is another persons luxury and vice versa.
And to go back to Chris152's point, I am afraid if you think businesses can last 12 months before getting back to normal then please just look at how many business have failed in the last 6 weeks, and those are just the ones who made the news. Our local pub (independent not chain) and a friends pub are both now looking at ways to liquidate the business, they are too small to allow social distancing if they were to re-open and the last 6 weeks have wiped out any buffer they might have had. A lot of small businesses probably have about a month,maybe 2 of buffer built in that would allow them to weather tough times. Government grants might have helped a bit but for many they are just not going to be able to re-open even if it was all lifted tomorrow. Even for big businesses it will tough and their workers, what are 4000 BA pilots going to do? Tesco deliveries?
I do agree with the realities of what's going on, but I do also question the WHY. One of them I feel is our consumptionist society as TN points out - the whole "earn £1 spend 99p = happiness - Earn £1, spend £1.01 = misery" situation. Our society seems to be programmed to spend the £1.01 - and even those who stick to the 99p mark are still in trouble in situations such as this.
I would wager that quite a few of the larger business that have failed recently had shareholders and a company board - they made profits, the board got fat payouts and so did the shareholders, and now the company is failing yet the shareholders are nowhere to be seen.
Maybe more companies in the future might want to consider the system used by Lloyds Bank - the Lloyds names - shareholders get paid in the good times, or have to return that money in the lean times.
or do what the Japanese do - keep a MUCH larger "float" - liquid assets that are easily useable, just like the people who have savings and assets than can easily liquidate.
Buying the largest house you can afford, or the fanciest car is all great while money flows - when it stops and you can't afford it anymore - well that's on you and YOUR choices. Same for companies that leverage existing, yet not fully paid for, assets to open new stores, or to try to expand into other markets etc etc.
Unless I'm mistaken this is how most capitalistic companies work - with no safety net - and this is only 11 years after 2008, so they learned nothing. (apart from banks obviously who seemed to learn they can do pretty much whatever they want)
RobinBHM":2tz6upid said:
The scary thing is that (if true) 16 million people only have £100 or less in their bank account / available savings.
That is an awful lot of people just 1 weeks wage away from debt.
my guess an awful lots of people are in the gooey stuff financially right now.
In the last 3 years I earned less than £20,000 after costs - yet because of the way my life has been, and after 2008, I have always been extra cautious about money when I have it - such that I can ride this out without the govt money should I choose to.
Now granted I have no children or non working spouse, but so do quite a few other single people - the largest portion of which are the 18-30 age group - who are now getting a very rude and unavoidable lesson in personal fiscal responsibility.
I would also re-iterate the above about those that spend each month at the 99p mark, have also been doing so without paying heed to 2008, or other previous economic downturns.
I'm not trying to be self righteous even though it may seem that way - I'm simply pointing out that peoples (and businesses and Govts) choices affect thier OTHER choices in times such as now, which seems bizarrely as though it's something most people don't beleive will ever happen to them - except this is the second time in just over a decade.
Those countries with a positive GDP (a cash surplus like we had before Blair) will ride this out no problem, and maybe we should start following thier examples of how they got that way in the near future.
You're not going to like what I'm going to say next but ... leaving the EU may well be one of the things that helps the UK weather the oncoming storm, for a whole bunch of reasons, but the open borders being the predominant one as the very poor EU countries with little to no govt support network, empty out to the countries that do.