David Smith is an economics writer for the London Times. A few of his recent classics included:
http://business.timesonline.co.uk/to...cle1625932.ece
http://www.economicsuk.com/blog/000326.html
If you put money on Mr Smith's predictions, you'd end up a pauper. How come some economists remain employed when they make hopelessly bad predictions?
http://business.timesonline.co.uk/to...cle1625932.ece
There are two things one should bear in mind about the housing market. One is that mere mention of a slowdown brings the “crash” obsessives out in force, their latest ammunition being the problems in the American sub-prime market. That has as much relevance to Britain’s housing market as the baseball world series has to whether Chelsea or Manchester United will win the Premiership.
Last time it took Hurricane Katrina’s devastation of New Orleans and surrounding areas, to give us a record crude price of $70.85 a barrel. This time Iran’s nuclear programme, and the fear of American military strikes, have pushed US crude above $75 and North Sea Brent crude above $74. This might be a useful time, then, to revisit my prediction that oil prices are unsustainable at these levels and will fall, in due course, to $40 a barrel.
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