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Reasons to be cheerful in 2012

It's not been a fun year financially, but there are reasons to be hopeful that 2012 will be better!

Financially speaking, 2011 was a rubbish year. Twelve months of soaring inflation, increasing taxes, rising unemployment, inept politicians and spreading austerity, with little to look forward to aside from years of falling incomes.

Everybody believes that 2012 will be worse, but enough of that. I’m bored of all the doom, and I bet you are too. It’s time to look on the bright side, if only for a moment.

So here are 12 reasons to be cheerful in 2012.

Austerity rules OK!

The British pride themselves on being at their best with their backs against the wall, and now we can put that boast to the test.

With the exception of greedy bankers and the mega-rich at one end and trade union hardliners at the other, most people accept that times are tough and we all have to make sacrifices. Conspicuous consumption is out, austerity is in. Maybe we’re not all in it together, but most of us are.

We’re not Greece (at least not yet)

Most people don’t realise how bad things are in Greece. Poverty, strikes, riots, forced privatisations, 60% pay cuts, collapsing health services and a terrifying feeling that the country is falling apart. Some Greeks have even been forced to pay tax, that’s how bad things have got.

Things may look rough here, but not that rough. We’re not Italy, Portugal, Spain or Ireland either.

We’re not in the euro

If we had joined the euro, we would be like Greece without the sunshine. Instead, we have been free to launch a money printing splurge to stop our economy grinding to a halt, and the Germans can’t stop us. It is banana republic economics, but the alternative really would have been bananas.

Inflation is set to fall

Inflation has topped 5% this year, which is lousy news for savers or anybody whose pay has been frozen. But inflation looks set to fall in 2012, as last January’s VAT hike falls out of the figures, the global economy shrinks and energy and food price rises slow.

Fingers crossed!

Base rate will stay at 0.5%

In March, the Bank of England will have held base rate at 0.5% for three whole years, saving homeowners with variable rate mortgages thousands and thousands of pounds. It has also spared hard-up homeowners the agony of repossession.

Base rates look set to stay low throughout 2012, and maybe 2013 and 2014 as well. That’s horrible news for savers, but remember, I’m looking for reasons to be cheerful.

Respite for savers

Cheer up savers! The average savings account pays a dismal 0.7% but with a little shopping around, you can beat 95% of savers. You can grab variable rates of up to 3%, and fixed rates of 4% or 5%. If you’re not getting that, don’t blame the banks, blame yourself.

House prices haven’t crashed yet...

More than three years into the credit crunch, and predictions that house prices would fall 30% or 40% still haven’t come true. House prices have fallen, but only 3.2% this year, which might just be the soft landing we’ve been hoping for. Fingers crossed!

... but they are falling

If you’re looking to buy your first place, time is on your side. As prices continue to slide, keep working on your deposit, and your moment should come. 

You can borrow money for free!

The best all-round credit card charges 0% on balance transfers and purchases for an incredible 15 months. That’s something to be cheerful about. Not everybody will qualify, but you can still find great cards even if you have a bad credit rating.

You can pay less tax

Taxes may have risen, but you don’t have to pay them. Cliff D’Arcy has found 10 ways to stop paying tax without breaking the law. Not only that, he has discovered the secret to getting rich.

Money: it’s in your hands

You don’t have to be skint when there are 10 easy ways to make money. Or why not start by Saving a fortune on broadband, phone and TV? And there is plenty more you can do to make your money last until payday.

It’s Olympics year

Remember how happy everybody was when London beat Paris to win the Olympics? We’ve been grumbling about the cost ever since, but so does every country that hosts the Olympics. Yet when the big moment comes, the cynics are drowned out in the national euphoria.

That euphoria may be harder to conjure this year, but I reckon we’ll manage it. Not only that, but you can Celebrate the Olympics on the cheap. After all, it has been dubbed the austerity games.

Don’t worry, be happy

When asked how happy we are with our lives in the new national well-being survey, 76% awarded themselves at least seven out of 10. We gave ourselves similar scores when asked how happy we were previously, and whether we consider our lives worthwhile. When asked about money, our scores dipped to 6.2 out of 10, the lowest in the survey. But as everybody knows, there is more to life than money. And right now, that’s a good thing.

See, I set out to find 12 reasons to be cheerful, and I managed 13! Life really is better than we think.

More: Free 2012 calendar to help you save money | Seven ways to maximise your savings in 2012

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  • 30 December 2011

    I lived in East London when we won the bid for the Olympics and was always against it, for many reasons including financial. I wonder if people forget that the London bombings were carefully planned for the following day when they make statements like remember how happy we were when London won.

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  • 30 December 2011

    Perhaps it shows how ignorant people have become of the financial system, but the idea that money printing and inflation is a good thing and a reason to be cheerful shows a lack of understanding of how this system screws most people over the long term. Sure, not being in the Euro allowed the UK to "print" its way out of trouble, countries like Spain, Ireland, Greece, etc, could not do. However, it is not so much a case of the UK being free to do that, more a case of what those other countries would have done had they not been in the Euro. Yes, they would all have "printed"! Massive inflation would have followed. Instead, the UK partially got away with it because the BoE gave the money printed to the financial elite, who kept it on their books or speculated with it, partly in commodities - the reason why we have inflation at the levels we do - the masses screwed again. Wake up, money printing and inflation is not good news accept for those that jumped on the fraudulent moral hazard train that got us into this mess in the first place. The bankers and politicians, all of them, have conned you into believing that this inflation thing is good and gets us out of a hole, when all it does is place the burden of paying for the mess on the honest and future generations who will find it difficult to pay for their education, homes, pensions, etc and will be forced to work longer for the privilege. This isn't about bad or good news, it's really about whether you want to live in a financial and economic system that rewards con artists and those that should be locked up for the fraud they have committed. Any system based on monetary inflation will make the lives of most ordinary people a constant battle to keep up. Most of you will fail, the system is designed to that end. About time some people woke up to this fact.

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