Archive for August 24th, 2015

Book Of The Hour! Get It Now

Monday, August 24th, 2015

Set in the mid nineteen nineties, this fast moving thriller lifts the curtain on sex, sleaze and corruption in high places as the long reign of the government totters to an end, following the ousting of the iconic Margaret Thatcher. The novel catches the mood of those times with a host of fictional characters who engage in political intrigue, sex, money laundering and murder, pursued by an Irish investigative journalist and his girlfriend, the daughter of a cabinet minister found dead in a hotel room after bondage sex.

KINDLE OR PAPERBACK     UK    US

How To Print Money

Monday, August 24th, 2015

An idea to stimulate economic growth without further government borrowing. Written in plain English and very easy to follow, this is the only really fresh approach out there to the intractable problems of the UK economy, and it is just beginning to be noticed in important places. Buy! Download only .99p Paperback £2.99Product Details

Kindle or Paperback  UK        US           

China Slowdown

Monday, August 24th, 2015

The Chinese authorities are fighting hard on every front to try and counter the effects of an economic slowdown which is thought by many to be deeper than official statistics reveal. Nevertheless what is now happening has wide implications for the rest of the world, most of which will suffer aftershocks.

It is a serious business when the fastest growing economy in the world slows up, even if it carries on growing at enviable levels. This is because the whole balance of globalisation has to a large extent focussed on the ever growing size of China’s contribution, to the point where it has been factored in and taken for granted. Markets are now in full retreat everywhere and oil has dropped to record lows for recent times. The FTSE 100 has fallen a thousand points from its peak. The situation is complicated by the large element of borrowing which has fuelled global stock prices, which if recovery is not rapid and sustained, will lead to knock on losses throughout the global system.

Given the situation now unfolding, the declaration by the CBI that the UK economy is likely to grow faster than expected, might be a touch hasty. We shall have to see. Cheaper oil is good, but a slowdown in China, mayhem in emerging markets and muddle in the eurozone are headwinds to say the very least. One perverse advantage of being unable to grow our exports may be that we have relatively less to lose.