WORLD> Europe
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Govt would not have bid for London Olympics in downturn
(Agencies)
Updated: 2008-11-13 11:02 LONDON -- Olympics minister Tessa Jowell has admitted Britain would not have chosen to host the 2012 Games in London if it had know about the economic downturn, according to a newspaper report Thursday. "Had we known what we know now, would we have bid for the Olympics? Almost certainly not," Jowell told leisure industry bosses at a dinner Monday, the Daily Telegraph reported. The Bank of England warned Wednesday that the economy was probably already in recession as a global financial crisis takes its toll, although economists will have to wait until early next year for confirmation.
Jowell played down her comments in a statement, saying: "I have often observed that we bid for 2012 in one economic climate and are now in another. "Had the scale of the downturn been anticipated, I am sure there would have been a view from some that this would not be the time to commit significant public expenditure to a project like the Olympics. "But as I made clear in my speech, the reality is very different. This is precisely the time for this investment to be made. It has the potential to be economic gold at a time of economic need." |