The recent usd 700bn surrender to Wall Street is only a temporary fix (some say less than 1% of what is required) and the USA's fixation with liquidity will fuel inflation and the inevitable crash will be more severe.
So where to put cash is a serious concern. Stricter fiscal controls will aid the recovering US dollar which is strengthening as GBP and Euro decline.
If the dollar recovers, then next year we may see oil down to usd 30/bbl levels and prices at the pumps should follow (after the inevitable further 2 years gouging).

Banks in UK offer 6.7% interest on savings however the GBP is falling and the Euro too will start to fall therefore repatriating cash right now might be costly. High interest rates often accompany a dodgy currency; what they give with one hand they take back with the other.
Singapore has a strong currency however the banks offer only 0.1% interest and since they can, for whatever reason, only guarantee SGD 20,000 they do not deserve our cash.
It would strengthen the situation here if government were to take prompt action and underwrite all savings up to SGD 250,000.00
This would suck cash from neighbouring economies, as Irish banks are doing (they have reached their limits), which perhaps is accelerating the GBPs inevitable collapse.
It is very dangerous to keep cash at home and gold is no longer an option. It does help that we have SGD 1,000 and SGD 10,000 notes.
Perhaps a safer option is for savers with banks such as HSBC to open a UK account which then is available in the event a quick transfer and higher interest rates are required.