Meanwhile, Northern Ireland is feeling pretty chipper.
Their personal wellbeing is lower than other age groups’.
The Office for National Statistics has landed on various metrics. It’s important that we look at them, as well as at GDP.
The question is: what sort of neutrality is it?
This distinguishes Britain from most of the rest of Europe.
Which is to say, it’s not very high.
Their numbers have declined by 16 per cent since 1999, but they still have some fight left in them.
Often the declines happen outside of periods of recession.
Thanks to improved security measures, vehicle crime levels are about a fifth of what they were in the 1990s. But will they rise again?
A sign of a buoyant rental market? Or of something far worse? And what will happen if their financial burdens increase?
Christianity is in decline in Britain, but there’s little certainty about how strong it is at the moment.
It’s fine news for consumers, for now. But the news could turn sour.
To mark the anniversary, here’s a selection of ten of the 93 posts so far.
Stoppages in the private sector have exceeded those in the public sector, but the number of working days lost is far smaller.
The number of working days lost to industrial action is 22 times smaller now than in the 1980s.