Hamish McRae
One of the country’s most respected financial journalists and commentators Hamish McRae is an associate editor of The Independent. He was named Business and Finance Journalist of the Year 2006 at the British Press Awards.
Hamish McRae: It will take time, but we'll recover
If officialdom seems over-optimistic in its forecasts, the markets seem too pessimistic
Recently by Hamish McRae
Hamish McRae: Will the world economy really start to grow next year?
Wednesday, 26 November 2008
The prospect is for a long haul and, if that's right, then our UK policy will prove wrong
Hamish McRae: A monumental debt that takes us back to the 70s
Tuesday, 25 November 2008
This is not going to work, is it? Having got us into a jam by borrowing too much, the way out is to borrow yet more. This is a gamble of monumental scale, a bet on the world economy growing again by the second half of next year. If it does recover, then the Chancellor may have succeeded in puffing up our own economy a bit during the downturn but the borrowing levels to achieve that are terrifying. If the world economy does not recover, the consequences don't bear thinking about.
Hamish McRae: Recessions serve a useful purpose
Wednesday, 19 November 2008
They force our whole society to figure out more effective ways of doing things
Hamish McRae: Should we keep our powder dry?
Wednesday, 19 November 2008
We are still in the early stages of the downturn but we can - in a funny way - see more about the policy response to it than we can about its scale and shape.
Hamish McRae: The bright side
Friday, 14 November 2008
The fall in the pound was given a new kick downwards by the Bank of England's Inflation Report, and is now as sharp was the decline after sterling was ejected from the ERM in 1992.
Hamish McRae: Cut taxes, but don't expect miracles
Wednesday, 12 November 2008
The Government can pull all the levers, but there's nothing at the other end
Hamish McRae: There's a following wind of goodwill, but very heavy weather lies ahead
Thursday, 6 November 2008
There isn't much time. The new administration takes office with a following wind of goodwill from America's trading and investment partners but a headwind of a sharply deteriorating domestic economy. That the world's markets were cool in their reaction to the election of Barack Obama signalled not a suspicious response to the voters' choice but rather a grim awareness of the scale of the economic problems ahead.
New President has a huge challenge ahead of him
Wednesday, 5 November 2008
It makes no sense to use loans from China to fill shopping malls with cheap tat, says Hamish McRae
Hamish McRae: Can we avoid the years of stagnation suffered by Japan?
Wednesday, 29 October 2008
There has been virtually no increase in Japanese living standards for 20 years
Hamish McRae: Less than it sounds
Tuesday, 28 October 2008
Sounds a lot, doesn't it? The Bank of England estimate that the total losses of the world's banks could reach £1.8 trillion is the highest official number I have seen yet and is, and should be, shocking.

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Columnist Comments
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Cameron’s speech, though good, was upstaged by Brown’s mortgage coup.
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Jacqui Smith is Brown’s lightning rod when it’s the PM we should be frazzling
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The Queen's Speech never has a theme, New Labour has never fabricated one.
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1 Matthew Norman: A written constitution is the answer
2 Steve Richards: Damian Green will soon be forgotten in the recession
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1 Steve Richards: Damian Green will soon be forgotten in the recession
2 Alexa Chung: 'Moonlighting as a DJ, I spun nu-metal to a room full of drunk hipsters'
3 Howard Jacobson: Thanks to Leonard Cohen, I can see the light that slips through the crack
4 Matthew Norman: A written constitution is the answer
5 Mark Steel: Never mind the baby, just get back to work
6 Leading Article: Statistical improbability
7 John Rentoul: Thanks, Your Majesty, but it's all about the Budget
8 Robert Fisk's World: The British should not forget the massive debt they owe the Irish
9 Leading article: We can give Zimbabwe hope
10 Leading article: Now is the time to tackle the abuses of our welfare system



