Today is the
30th anniversary of the disaster at the Heysel Stadium in Brussels, which has
drawn some reports but little comment.
Let us remember them.
It is only
a month off fifteen years since we were there on that terrace to see the France
v Portugal Euro Semi-Final on free tickets via a competition.
Close to the
end of extra time, France were awarded a penalty and scored the winner. There was a strong reaction. It was thought by the crowd that the penalty
had been given because the Portuguese goalie had fouled Henry of France and by many
of both teams. We were not far behind
that goal and thought so too.
It was only on
the way back in the coach that we were told it was because after Henry had been
frustrated, the ball went out to Wilford who had a shot on goal which just
clipped the hand of a defender to hit the side netting. It was spotted by the Assistant Referee on
the line, not deliberate but a foul and so a penalty kick.
So what we
were convinced had happened, it did not and in fact was something difficult to
see by anyone on the pitch, including Wilford, all the players, the actual
referee and everyone in the crowd.
It was the TV that showed it here on screen with the row that followed.
So what you
"see" may not be what you think it is. At the moment there is the row about FIFA and
football and allegedly strange dealings over the hosting of the next two World
Cups. Politics is intervening in these
matters and others.
The name
Goldman Sachs has come up. There is also
the disquiet about Greece and what the money situation might be. Again the name of Goldman Sachs is there.
In the latter
case there is the bitter of issue of just what Greek GDP, gross domestic
product, has been and will be. The story
is that the figures of the past were fiddled, or manipulated if you like, to tell
a better tale than was true to get the money needed.
So a new team
of statisticians has been brought in to sort this out only to be hounded
because what they see as more true and reliable is very inconvenient.
Also, up in
the Baltic, there is Latvia. Despite it
riding the storm to a better degree than others it could be better but it is
claimed its figures on productivity are relatively good. However in the footnotes it mentions that
there has been substantial net emigration of unemployed low waged males which
has helped.
Back in the UK
our government is criticised because whereas productivity ought to be ever
improving it is not and seems flat. I
have considered going into town to consult some of the large number of Latvians
we have now, but they are very busy in largely manual and construction work.
They are hard
working and efficient but the buildings going up are by traditional
methods. On the other hand a lot of
existing buildings are up to let or for reconstruction as flats because the
supposed hi-tech jobs have gone. Also,
my Baltic friends, we share some DNA, are big in hand car washing.
In ancient
times, the mid 20th Century, I used to wash my own car, which did not figure in
the GDP. Then came the technological
miracle of auto car washes, which did.
At first
because of the workmanship of British car making, using one meant getting a
shower inside the car as well, but this was corrected by buying foreign cars as
did many other people.
Now however,
rather than be banged about in a shaking car and worried about the wipers and
bodywork there is the pleasure of high standard valeting done by a large team
of men aided by a lady Valkyrie. Who
cares, I ask, looking at the shining results, about perishing productivity?
There is
another bonus about having my Baltic distant cousins around. Since they arrived we no longer troubled by
groups of youths at weekends and such.
Also, when a
posse of Roma with caravans turned up on a car park nearby, they were very soon
gone without our constabulary being troubled although those with sensitivities
on the subject of diversity may wonder.
Again, none of
this appears in either the GDP or productivity figures. As I look around the economy, it is clear
that there are now and a lot more than before, many areas where the old ways of
calculating and defining are inadequate and misleading. So we are trying to run things on deficient
data.
This allows
the likes of rogue banks and other financial entities with major influence to
more or less dictate what the figures ought to look like rather than any
reference to reality. In short they are
gaming the figures.
Also, it means
governments, notably our own scoring so many own goals.
"Also, my Baltic friends, we share some DNA, are big in hand car washing."
ReplyDeleteThey are and at a fiver for a quick but thorough wash we don't bother doing it ourselves.