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The British Panic
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Re: The British Panic
Originally posted by *T* View PostLink broken
gone, can't find it cached or anywhere else, but Mish has most of it
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogsp...pean-bank.html
Alistair Darling, the Chancellor, could give the banks billions of pounds in return for shares in an emergency bailout plan to be enacted if the financial crisis worsens, The Daily Telegraph has learnt.
The Treasury has drawn up detailed plans for the scheme, which would put taxpayers' money at risk.
Ministers believe it may soon become necessary if banks do not begin lending money again to consumers and to each other.
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Re: The British Panic
Found it:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/c...the-abyss.html
We face extreme danger. Unless there is immediate intervention on every front by all the major powers acting in concert, we risk a disintegration of global finance within days. Nobody will be spared, unless they own gold bars.
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Re: The British Panic
Originally posted by krakknisse View Post
Boy is Ambrose cheerleading
As for the US itself, it has not yet exhausted its policy arsenal. It can escalate further up the nuclear ladder. The Fed can cut interest rates from 2pc to zero. If that fails, it can let rip with the mass purchase of US debt.
“The US government has a technology, called a printing press,” said Fed chief Ben Bernanke in November 2002. (His helicopter speech).
In extremis, the Treasury/Fed can swoop into any market to shore up asset prices. They can buy Florida property. They can even buy SUV guzzlers from the car lots in Detroit, and mangle them in scrap yards. As Bernanke put it, the Fed can “expand the menu of assets that it buys.”
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Re: The British Panic
Film of the dumping of crops into the ocean was often included in documentaries on the Great Depression. They didn't call it "asset buying" but the similarities are striking to these possibilities, as an attempt to deal with over production.
(In contradistinction, France's state funding of 30,000 new homes seems, on the surface, insane.)
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Re: The British Panic
Originally posted by D-Mack View PostBoy is Ambrose cheerleading
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Re: The British Panic
Originally posted by ASH View PostAmbrose often sounds like he's cheerleading American policy because he's on the anti-Euro side of an "is the Euro viable" debate. One of his recurring themes is that the Euro isn't backed by enough political authority nor strong enough institutions to deal effectively with a crisis like this. American institutions are often brought up for purposes of comparison. From what I can gather, the pro- and anti-Euro/EU argument is pretty heated in the UK. Maybe Mega can comment?
All of the English papers are traditionally Tory-supporting and owned by Murdoch, excepting the Guardian, the Mirror, sometimes the FT (oddly enough) and sometimes the Independent.It's Economics vs Thermodynamics. Thermodynamics wins.
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