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Opinionopinion

Take these Olympic figures with a large pinch of salt

We should advise our children to also be wary of statistics, especially those bandied about by politicians adept at massaging and manipulating them to ‘prove’ a point.

Olympic opening ceremony(Image: Donald Miralle/Getty Images)

In the absence of George Orwell’s 1984 and Animal Farm becoming embedded as non-negotiable elements of the national curriculum, it is surely the duty of every parent to remind their offspring of the dangers of economic inference, particularly when uttered by our political masters.

We should advise our children to also be wary of statistics, especially those bandied about by politicians adept at massaging and manipulating them to ‘prove’ a point.

Consider, for example, last week’s figures which purported to prove that the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ had enjoyed, and would continue to enjoy, a significant economic boost from last year’s Olympic Games.

There is absolutely no doubt that the Games acted as a wonderful morale-booster for a largely disgruntled nation weighed down by the relentless, often heartless, affects of austerity.

The opening ceremony showed the world we had, despite everything, retained our sense of humour. Many Britons expected an embarrassing display of extreme political correctness. Instead, we had a laugh, the Queen and James Bond stealing the show.

Then, as gold medals accumulated at a terrifically rapid rate, so the country’s mood changed. Patriotism became fashionable once more.

Unfortunately, there is no reliable measure of a nation’s ‘feelgood factor’ and its subsequent economic impact, although sport provided the former in spades last summer.

But did that translate directly into improved economic activity?