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  • UK: Why the banks won't lend

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisf...g-crisis/print

    Why the banks won't lend
    Determined to save themselves, banks can't be forced to expand lending. Public ownership is the only way to avert disaster

    Michael Meacher
    guardian.co.uk, Monday 5 January 2009 11.15 GMT



    For a year or more now, the US and UK governments have been fighting the financial meltdown by trying to get the banks to perform their proper function of lending credit to businesses and households and thus boosting demand across the economy. In the October bail-out of the banks, a staggering £500bn (more than one-third of UK GDP) was made available to the banks to kick-start lending.

    A special liquidity scheme provided £200bn to allow the banks to swap illiquid mortgage bonds for more attractive government paper, subject to a fee (or haircut). A credit guarantee scheme provided guarantees for £250bn of debt issued by banks so that the banks could afford more funding to pass on to customers. In addition, £50bn was made available to recapitalise bank balance sheets, of which £37bn has so far been utilised. However, none of these measures succeeded in getting bank lending going again.

    Further measures are now therefore being considered. The special liquidity scheme could be expanded to include bonds which package up other loans such as credit cards. The Crosby report, from the former HBOS chief executive, proposes that a £100bn guarantee should be provided over two years to try to get bank lending operating again between banks. Or the national loans guarantee plan put forward by the Tories could be adapted to underwrite loans for small businesses, which would ease pressure on banks that are unwilling to lend because of a regulatory demand that they hold more capital.

    The problem with all these measures remains enforceability. The three banks that accepted taxpayer funds – RBS and Lloyds TSB plus HBOS – were told by the government as a quid pro quo to maintain lending to businesses and homeowners at 2007 levels. That has certainly not happened. But the Treasury cannot even, in the midst of a devastating credit crunch, get access from the banks to what the credit flows actually are. The government is therefore considering guaranteeing a range of new loans on condition that the banks are set strict targets for lending this year as the recession deepens. But, again, how will this be enforced?

    Quantitative easing is yet another measure under consideration. Under this proposal, the central bank would buy up long-dated Treasury bonds and gilts in order to drive down long-term interest rates, since these have not come down anywhere near as fast as official short-term rates. The risk with this, however, is that if the authorities calculate the deflation-inflation pressures wrongly, the bubble created in the bond market replacing the bubble in the housing market could burst, leading to a sharp fall in bond prices and thus a highly damaging rise in long-term interest rates.

    So what should be done? The real joker in the pack is that every conceivable incentive is being offered to the banks to expand lending, at stupefying cost to the taxpayer, yet the banks still won't oblige, and have even today announced that they expect to reduce lending in the first quarter of 2009. The reason simply is that the banks are determined to hoover up all this Treasury largesse and grace of the taxpayer, and use it to prop up their balance sheets and not incur any further bad debts after their disastrous experience of being caught with billions of toxic mortgage-backed securities in 2007-8. The banks, despite the crash they have now visited on the real economy and despite the eye-watering mountains of taxpayers' aid they have absorbed without recompense, are still determined to save themselves, not the businesses and individuals they exist to serve.

    In these circumstances, the only certain way to ensure that lending is resumed on the scale now desperately required is to take public control of the banks, temporarily at least, to avert the worst crash since the Great Depression. Now that neo-liberalism is wholly discredited, is that still a taboo too far? I think not.

    guardian.co.uk © Guardian News and Media Limited 2009

  • #2
    Re: UK: Why the banks won't lend

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Meacher

    Meacher is a member of the Fabian Society.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fabian_Society

    The Fabian Society is a British intellectual socialist movement, whose purpose is to advance the principles of Social democracy via gradualist and reformist, rather than revolutionary means.

    ...

    Influence on Labour government

    The Fabian Society Tax Commission of 2000 was widely credited[9] with influencing the Labour government's policy and political strategy for its one significant public tax increase: the National Insurance rise to raise £8 billion for National Health Service spending. Several other recommendations, including a new top rate of income tax, were to the left of government policy and not accepted, though this comprehensive review of UK taxation was influential in economic policy and political circles.[11]

    Criticism

    Leon Trotsky professed to believe Fabianism was an attempt to save capitalism from the working class. He wrote, "throughout the whole history of the British Labour movement there has been pressure by the bourgeoisie upon the proletariat through the agency of radicals, intellectuals, drawing-room and church socialists and Owenites who reject the class struggle and advocate the principle of social solidarity, preach collaboration with the bourgeoisie, bridle, enfeeble and politically debase the proletariat.”[12]

    In an article published in The Guardian on 14th February 2008, following the apology offered by Australian prime minister Kevin Rudd to the "stolen generations", Geoffrey Robertson criticises Fabian socialists for providing the intellectual justification for the eugenics policy that led to the stolen generations scandal.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: UK: Why the banks won't lend

      For us yanks that are in the dark on the lost generation here's the Guardian link: http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisf...b/14/australia

      Here in the US we're seeing the Liberal Glitterati on parade- hell, they've even brought in a Kennedy- as part of the deer (most of us) in the headlights (them- crowd control) exercise. The Fabians would be much too explicit for America- at least for now, where forbidden word conditioning has been going on for decades

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      • #4
        Re: UK: Why the banks won't lend

        Rather than oblique name-calling, perhaps you could focus on the point of the essay?

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: UK: Why the banks won't lend

          "The banks, despite the crash they have now visited on the real economy and despite the eye-watering mountains of taxpayers' aid they have absorbed without recompense, are still determined to save themselves, not the businesses and individuals they exist to serve."

          This is a curious passage. Surely the banks exist, first and foremost, to ensure their own continued existence? Anyone who thought they would resume lending out of a deep sense of public obligation, let alone a sense of remorse, misunderstands the nature of any profit-making entity. If governments failed to attach a quid pro quo or lending benchmarks to the various bail-outs, then shame on them.

          Surely bankers know that if banking --as a system-- fails to generate fresh loan activity the economy, of which banks are a part, is doomed. However each may be hoping --on an individual basis-- that it can survive a systemic collapse. Whether temporary nationalization is the way forward is another question. But as banks violated the first taboo of accepting public monies the public sector should have no compunction about dictating terms to the banks.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: UK: Why the banks won't lend

            Originally posted by due_indigence View Post
            "The banks, despite the crash they have now visited on the real economy and despite the eye-watering mountains of taxpayers' aid they have absorbed without recompense, are still determined to save themselves, not the businesses and individuals they exist to serve."

            This is a curious passage. Surely the banks exist, first and foremost, to ensure their own continued existence? Anyone who thought they would resume lending out of a deep sense of public obligation, let alone a sense of remorse, misunderstands the nature of any profit-making entity. If governments failed to attach a quid pro quo or lending benchmarks to the various bail-outs, then shame on them.

            Surely bankers know that if banking --as a system-- fails to generate fresh loan activity the economy, of which banks are a part, is doomed. However each may be hoping --on an individual basis-- that it can survive a systemic collapse. Whether temporary nationalization is the way forward is another question. But as banks violated the first taboo of accepting public monies the public sector should have no compunction about dictating terms to the banks.
            Determined to save themselves, banks can't be forced to expand lending. Public ownership is the only way to avert disaster
            Interesting that in trying to "save themselves", they might end up losing themselves to public ownership.

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: UK: Why the banks won't lend

              Originally posted by Sapiens View Post
              http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisf...g-crisis/print

              Why the banks won't lend
              Determined to save themselves, banks can't be forced to expand lending. Public ownership is the only way to avert disaster

              ...In these circumstances, the only certain way to ensure that lending is resumed on the scale now desperately required is to take public control of the banks, temporarily at least, to avert the worst crash since the Great Depression. Now that neo-liberalism is wholly discredited, is that still a taboo too far? I think not...


              Sounds like the UK needs a New, New Deal from New, New Labour?

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