British Prime Minister suggests world is heading into a Depression!
LONDON, England - February 4, 2009 - Prime Minister Gordon Brown appeared to acknowledge for the first time today that the world economy was heading for a 1930s-style Depression.
Mr. Brown stumbled slightly over his words at Commons question time, just a week after admitting that Britain was facing a “deep recession”.
As the financial gloom deepens, he told the Tory leader David Cameron today, “We should agree, as a world, on a monetary and fiscal stimulus that will take the world out of Depression.”
The comment went unnoticed during rowdy question time exchanges between Mr. Cameron and Mr. Brown, which centered on protectionism and the Prime Minister’s use of the phrase “British jobs for British workers”. Ironically, the exchange ended with Mr. Brown accusing the Tory leader of deliberately "talking Britain down".
A No. 10 spokesman said that Mr. Brown's use of the word "Depression" was not deliberate.
The term "Depression" refers to sustained recessions characterized by high unemployment and a severe lack of business confidence rather than regular cyclical downturns. It has not been used by British policymakers during the current downturn except by way of warning and comparison with the Great Depression of the early 1930s.