Everybody is right that it is tougt times for golf course/clubs, not only in England but also in Scotland.
I think that Mark Pearce is right regarding the need to have some sort of bar/restaurant minimums, but I now that at my two clubs people will balk at that idea (and have at one, where the pitifully small £25/year minimum was scrapped at the latest AGM). Why? Well....I think that at both of my clubs (one well known, one village) there are probably a majority of members who harldy frequent the place and when they do play little or no serious golf. Membership to them is a conveniece or badge of honor, and anything which requires them to show a commitment to the club, rather than its aura, and which costs some money, no matter how little, is just too mujch for them.
What is happening, I see, is a slow but accelerating purging from memberships of those who are not committed to the club and/or the game of golf. In a sense, this is good, in that what should come out of the ashes is a stronger and more cohesive club, but I wonder..... If too many casual members are hived off, will enough remain to keep the club solvent? One answer at one of my clubs has been to increase "social" membership (i.e. no playing privileges but access to the relatively spectacular clubhouse. It has worked in the sense of bringing more people into the facility, but center of gravity of the ethos of the club is shifting from golf to entertainment. Maybe this is good, maybe nbot. We shall see.