There has
been a good deal of interest in the wife of Mark Carney, Diana Fox, herself an economist of standing and with clear interests.
They met, it seems, at Oxford . Also, they seem to have married in the County
in 1994; in fact in the Registration District of Bullingdon. Consequently for those with a fevered
imagination, the name Bullingdon will allow it to run riot.
Who from
the fabled Bullingdon Club might have been present at the nuptials and the
reception afterwards? Was there an
ingratiating chap called Dave who was offering advice on tax avoidance schemes,
claiming to be well in with some people in the know at Coutts Bank?
When Mark
told him he worked for Goldman Sachs Dave then proved difficult to shake off,
offering to exchange all sorts of unlikely contact details and promises of
great futures to come, if only John Major would listen to what Tony Blair and
Gordon Brown were telling chaps he knew in The City.
One of
Dave’s friends, who called himself variously Gideon and George (not Brown) made
himself something of a bore. He insisted
on clearing the table he sat at and then tried to explain the Endogenous Growth
Theory with a box of matches. When Diana
asked him about the Gini Coefficient he claimed to have run out of matches.
The real
nuisance and there is always one at a wedding, was a plump chap with messy hair
which looked suspiciously like a dyed blonde.
He called himself Boris, but that might have been an affectation. He had to be prised off the bridesmaids but
then went round telling people about his mad schemes.
One was to
build the world’s greatest super-hub airport based on the Kidlington airfield
just north of Oxford by the A34 to Stratford upon Avon . Convenient for links to major motorways it
had excellent rail possibilities.
One, the Oxford to Banbury line enabled routing to both Birmingham International
Airport and Manchester to the north. To the South from Reading
there were links possible both to Heathrow and Gatwick with relatively minor
works as well as the direct line to Paddington in London .
There was
also the old Oxford to Cambridge line which could be reinstated at
relatively little cost to link to Stansted.
If track works were to be done on all then some high speed running would
give quick links across the country by rail.
A couple of
other interesting people arrived, claiming to have been invited, a Peter
Mandelson, a Labour Party back room boy and someone called Rothschild. Apparently they knew well placed Russians
rich in energy investments. Oxfordshire,
it seemed had not only major coal reserves but also vast oil potential in the
rocks below.
This might
make all the oil tar sands of Mark’s native Alberta look like a puddle on a petrol (gas)
station forecourt. Of course, it was
neither the time nor the place for this kind of discussion, despites Peter’s
apparent obsession with the idea.
What was
touching was that when the happy couple left the reception, the three
Bullingdon Boys did a skit on their old school song “Jolly Good Wedding
Weather” to see them off to their Austerity and Debt Free honeymoon at Butlins
at Bognor.
Diana
insisted on taking the handlebars of the vintage motor-cycle while Mark found
the side car quite comfortable; so long as he remembered to lean out when Diana
did some nifty overtaking on an inside bend.
Now they
are all back together again, remembering happy times.
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