The Scotsman

Politician­s and business need to brainstorm fresh ideas to tackle crisis

As Covid continues to wreak havoc on the economy, Jim Duffy fears there is more misery to come

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Prepare for a winter of discontent, malcontent­s and general misery. And while I, thankfully, do not have the Medusa Touch to will this to happen, like Richard Burton in the film of the same name, this pandemic has ensured it is going to. Believe it or not, right now, today, we are in the good times. And that may feel a bit odd as people lose lives, loved ones, jobs and, in many cases, hope. But, while the dark nights have not drawn in as yet, they are coming. And with them, black clouds and anxiety. Now, more than ever, we need honesty from politician­s.

But all is well, I hear many of you say. The stock markets are flying and a V-shaped recovery is taking place. Apple is at an all-time-high value as Wall Street’s first $2 trillion company. Elon Musk, the Space X and Tesla guy, has seen his private wealth rocket by a factor of two to $90 billion and the S&P 500 stock index has also hit record highs. There must be money out there – shoots of significan­t recovery and “hopium” abound. You’d be right if you were the CEO of Apple or Mr Musk – but what lies ahead is the price of it all.

Europe is skint. The UK is skint. The USA is skint. Government­s have borrowed trillions to shore up the pandemic-ridden economies that now feed on stimulus and debt. But, while all this stimulus money has been plentiful, it has not reached you and me in meaningful amounts. As you see, those at the top are reaping the rewards as corporate bonds and liquidity pours into markets. Even the furlough scheme, which has been great for so many, will now come to an end and has to be paid for somehow. The debt has been building up and, trust me when I tell you, the writing is on the wall. We never saved for a rainy day and the roof has gaping holes.

While we may not all have economics degrees from Oxford or MIT, we too know that something sinister is in the wind. Job losses are just starting. British Airways, Easyjet, Quantas, Debenhams, Hays Travel, Airbnb, Airbus, Marks and Spencer, River Island, TSB, Pizza Express... and so it goes on. In Scotland, with the oil industry on its knees, Petrofac, Halliburto­n, Sodexo, Weatherfor­d and more have laid off workers and plan for more cuts. Footfall in shopping malls is down despite them opening up. Car sales across the board are down. New car sales are down a third in June this year when compared with a year earlier. And it will only get worse. A lot worse.

You may be thinking now that

I am one of those souls suffering from depression as this ailment has increased by a factor of 20 per cent over the last six months. One in five people appear to have depressive symptoms compared with one in ten before the pandemic, this according to the Office for National Statistics.

But, while this does not augur well for the general state of health in our nation, I am not there – yet. I can sense it in those around me, though. It is sneaking up on them, percolatin­g around societies in all countries. But rather than gloss over everything, pretending it will just go away, we should be honest and seek honesty from those who lead us. The bad dream continues and we need strong forward planning and frank government to get us through this winter – and what is to follow.

Medusa has done her job well in a global pandemic that we were not prepared for. Let’s be honest, we were more ready for a nuclear war and its fallout than a disease-ridden war.

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