A Corrupt Establishment

September 14, 2012 By Malcolm Blair-Robinson

Usually when people use the word corruption they think of bribes and kickbacks. There is another use which implies a decay, dysfunction and a loss of integrity. This disturbing pall now hangs menacingly over the governing establishment of our country and permeates through the very institutions, the police, the judiciary, the press and the politicians, […]

Nick Clegg and The B Word

September 12, 2012 By Malcolm Blair-Robinson

Nick Clegg found himself in hot water for using the same B word that gave Gordon Brown trouble in 2010. The excuse was that it was an early draft of a speech which should not have been released. Oh, of course! It is not surprising our politicians have a reputation for not being honest with […]

Full Employment: The Real Plan B

September 12, 2012 By Malcolm Blair-Robinson

It may seem odd, but the idea of full employment has so disappeared from the political vocabulary that today the phrase is never heard. Yet in the post war period no political party could expect to win an election without full employment as a declared policy objective. What happened? Full employment was generally achieved  until […]

Printing Money

September 9, 2012 By Malcolm Blair-Robinson

Before the start of the global economic crisis in 2008, it was generally assumed that printing money, the term used for nowadays creating new money electronically, was the road to ruin. Zimbabwe and post WWI Weimar Germany were cited as benchmarks for this madness. This has not turned out to be the case. Quantitative Easing, as […]

Euro: Has The ECB Fixed It?

September 8, 2012 By Malcolm Blair-Robinson

The markets thought so, at least for a while. The problems of the euro are now so complex that there is no single decision which will fix the whole thing, but the decision of the ECB to print unlimited money to buy the bonds of effectively bust countries is at last a recognition that the […]

Can Obama Win?

September 6, 2012 By Malcolm Blair-Robinson

The answer must be yes, but it will be difficult. A faltering economy is the most likely hurdle to deny a US president a second term in normal times. But these are not normal times. When Obama came to office promising change, he faced the biggest economic problems in all America’s history. The scale of […]

A Shuffled Government

September 6, 2012 By Malcolm Blair-Robinson

So, is this government any different to the last one? Yes, but not in the way commentators report. It has shifted the Tory component to the right. Cameron has removed from areas of controversy ministers who might cause distraction because of their personal views or doings, Hunt, Lansley and Greening, but they are still at […]

Cameron and Milliband: Reshuffle Time

September 2, 2012 By Malcolm Blair-Robinson

The media is building anticipation of a cabinet reshuffle. Certainly one is needed to sharpen up the perception of a government in control of events, not the victim of them. Whatever Cameron does will impact the Labour front bench. What makes this latest prospect of musical chairs most interesting is that it is the first […]

Romney’s View of the World

August 31, 2012 By Malcolm Blair-Robinson

In his acceptance speech Mitt Romney told the Republican convention that he would pursue a more assertive foreign policy than Barack Obama. We need to remind ourselves, especially American readers, just where things had got to before Obama was elected. The situation in international relations was this. The United States was the most despised country […]