James Ashton
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BUSINESS leaders are rallying this weekend in an attempt to restore consumer confidence.
“We are in danger of talking ourselves into a worse place than we needed to,” said Justin King, the J Sainsbury chief executive .
Sir Philip Green, the BHS and Topshop entrepreneur, added: “People are fed up with reading about doom and gloom. The underlying foundations of the UK economy are strong and we should not allow anything from what is a global situation to send us off track.”
Simon Cowell, the X Factor judge who runs music and television business Syco, agrees. “I have more confidence in this country than at any other time in my life,” he said.
Chief executives believe Britain’s relative strength lies in low unemployment and interest rates cut by 0.5% last week.
They think Gordon Brown’s £500 billion plan to strengthen the financial sector by offering to part-nationalise high-street banks should steady the ship.
“Instead of being half a step behind events, what the government has done is probably one step ahead of events,” said Sir Stuart Rose, executive chairman of Marks & Spencer. “It doesn’t mean there aren’t going to be problems but people need to recognise that life is not going to stop.”
Hugh Osmond, the entrepreneur owner of Pearl Assurance, said: “The UK rescue plan is the most comprehensive plan that any government has come up with to address this crisis.
“It is very clever and well thought through, addressing the issues of capital and liquidity. Once this scheme has been enacted, we will have the strongest banks in the Western world.”
Retailers concede that consumers’ willingness to spend has fallen. Asda’s income tracker suggests the average family is £11 a week worse off compared with a year ago, due in part to soaring household bills. However, the supermarket group’s chief executive, Andy Bond, said there was light at the end of the tunnel.
“Food inflation has already peaked and we are beginning to see the price of groceries falling again’” he said.
Sainsbury’s King added: “We don’t want to encourage consumers to spend money they can’t afford but the crisis within banks and now shares more generally does not have to transmit itself to the real economy.”
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It is producer confidence, not consumer confidence, that this country needs. Exactly what this country *doesn't* need is more debt-based consumption.
Paul, Coventry,
I'll believe all of them when they are individually as wealthy next year as they are/were this year, and when the organisations they represent do likewise without a mass clearout of staff. But hey, not having a clue has never been a bar to being outspoken.
Joe, Geelong, Expat in OZ
Don't forget one thing.
They all have a vested interest in you and I spending money
It's the biggest problem we will face over the next 5 years, the fact that big business is geared up to make profits from people who are spending money they simply do not have
It will be painful
Richard, Suffolk,