In a stunning display of bureaucratic inertia, the Office for National Statistics has announced that UK inflation has held steady at 2.2%. The news was greeted by the kind of muted applause usually reserved for a mediocre magic trick at a children's party. Economists, those wizards of guesswork dressed in tweed, had predicted a rise, but the economy, in a rare act of defiance, decided to remain resolutely, infuriatingly stationary. It is the fiscal equivalent of a man falling from a skyscraper who, halfway down, shrugs and orders a gin and tonic.
Let us dissect this corpse of a statistic. The Consumer Prices Index, that great barometer of misery, shows that the cost of living has stopped climbing. Good news for the average Briton, who can now afford exactly the same amount of nothing as last month. The government hails this as a triumph of economic policy. 'We have steadied the ship,' they cry, ignoring the fact that the ship is a dinghy in a hurricane, and the passengers are bailing water with teacups.
But what does this really mean? It means the price of bread has stopped rising. It now just sits there, stale and expensive, mocking you. It means your rent will not increase this month. It will instead remain at a level that requires you to sell a kidney on the black market. The economy, we are told, is 'resilient.' Resilient like a zombie, shambling forward despite missing limbs and a gaping hole in its chest.
Meanwhile, the pound sterling, that great symbol of British pride, continues its slow death spiral. It now has the purchasing power of a Monopoly note. You could trade a pound coin for a single Jaffa Cake, but even then you would be overpaying. The Bank of England, that august institution of tweed and dourness, sits on its interest rate lever. It does not pull it. It prefers to stare at it, as if expecting the lever to move itself. 'We are watching the situation,' they say, which is finance-speak for 'We have no idea what to do.'
And yet, the British people are expected to cheer. 'Inflation holds steady,' the headlines scream, as if that is a cause for celebration. It is like celebrating that the house fire has stopped spreading, even as the roof collapses. We are a nation of happy arson victims, clapping for the fire brigade as our homes turn to ash.
But let us not be entirely cynical. There is a glimmer of hope in this gloom. The services sector is growing. This means that people are spending money on haircuts, restaurant meals, and cinema tickets. They are doing this because they have given up on ever owning a home. Why save for a mortgage when you can buy a flat white instead? It is the ultimate pyrrhic victory: we stimulate the economy by embracing financial despair.
In conclusion, the economy is a patient in critical care, and we are told it is 'stable.' Stable, yes, but still plugged into a machine that beeps ominously. The doctors in Whitehall smile and say, 'The patient is not dying.' They do not mention that the patient is also not living. So raise a glass of overpriced gin to British resilience. It is the resilience of a man who, when asked if he is drowning, replies, 'No, I am just waving.'








