Back in the
early 1970’s we have learned that the top civil servants at the time had
reconciled themselves to a UK
in a steady decline which might prove difficult or impossible to stop. Many senior politicians agreed with them but
said little or nothing publicly because of obvious electoral problems.
Between
them they came up with going into the nearest available bolthole, the Common
Market in the hope of delaying the evil day and inflating their way out of debt
while hoping that the common man would not really notice the erosion of his
income or liberties.
At the same
time there were many bits and pieces of Empire that were also a problem. They were poor, with no natural resources and
with populations wanting to have some sort of equality with the better off
nations. Some were so small that any
kind of government needed underpinning to survive.
Also, they
had to be kept away from communism or other extreme political conditions that
might make them a nuisance. One way was
to divert money and its management in that direction. In 1973 for example, The Bahamas, riding a
tourist boom after the Bond file “Thunderball”, became an attractive place.
The newly
liberated state had a clear policy that it intended to expand on finance and
make this one of the lynch pins of the economy along with tourism. The UK government, the high mandarins
of the Civil Service and the leadership of both political parties very quietly
and readily accepted extensive tax avoidance policies in this and other
colonies.
During a
decade of social disruption, conflicting economic policies and the continued
decline of UK
industry and failures in state planned renewal, those with access to the then almost
secret private banks and advisers managed to take care of themselves. Along with many of our elite were many
leaders in the entertainment industry.
At the same
time the government completely misread the potential of the space industry,
failed to recognise the full implications of container shipping and “invested”
in one doomed scheme after another. At
the same time the oil and gas industries were changing the basis of our energy
supplies, again botched by government.
We had
stumbling, blundering, ineffective governments trashing the economy and
wrecking any national identity. While
all this was going on our media and entertainment industries were feeding us a limited
diet of largely rubbish as either news or entertainments. There were some notable exceptions but these
were not the norm only things we pretend were.
Looking at
the situation for 2013 its déjà vu all over again.
I agree. I think we knew our governments were dire at the time, but the internet seems to bring it out more starkly.
ReplyDeleteI think they are struggling, both with being useless and with us knowing and saying they are useless.