Thanks grannyactivist - the article was interesting and I'll try and get the book.
Coming up to Christmas, there were lots of worries being expressed in the media as to whether retail profits might fall. There was even a suggestion that it was "patriotic" to keep spending so as to prop up the economy, and the introduction from the US of the Black Friday scrum to encourage people to rush out (or stay in) and buy stuff.
Then on 3 January in the Guardian came the headline "£1,250,000,000: Amount of extra debt added in November - more than any month since credit crunch of 2008" and the first sentence reads "Consumer helplines have sounded a warning after Britons ran up their highest level of new debt in November for nearly seven years ..."
So, on top of those people who are struggling because of unemployment, low pay or reduced hours who are having to borrow to pay for necessities, we had people being encouraged to think that spending money you haven't got on something you don't really need is somehow a form of saving.
The article said the peak in unsecured lending was reached in September 2008 and over the next four years consumers started to pay off more than they borrowed, and banks placed tough restrictions on borrowing. However, there has over the last two years been an acceleration in lending with "Banks and credit card companies jostling for business .... The £150 billion credit card industry is to come under investigation this month by the Financial Conduct Authority over accusations of aggressive marketing ..."
This is surely a crazy way to run a country's economy?