Desperation Developing Inside British Government

The Guardian reports that labour stakes its reputation on second gamble.

(emphasis mine) [my comment]

Labour stakes its reputation on second gamble
Patrick Wintour, political editor
The Guardian
, Monday 19 January 2009

As the Treasury last night finalised its second sweeping banking revival package in three months, Downing Street was preparing to go on the offensive, justifying the package not as a bail-out for the banks, but an attempt to protect companies and families trying to secure a mortgage. The Ł200bn insurance scheme is not for the culpable banks, but for their innocent customers, ministers will say. [Bailing out banks and paying bonuses to bankers is unfortunate side of effect of helping the little guy (sarcasm). I don't believe labour's strategy will work too well.]

The tone towards the banks is becoming more aggressive. Gordon Brown and a phalanx of ministers will say they share the frustration of the public at the irresponsibility of past lending practices, the slowness with which they have revealed their debts and their stubborn refusal in the past few months to release credit.

The tactics, however, betray a nervousness in Labour circles that the public will simply not understand why there is a second tranche of help going to Britain's bankers, who have already received billions of pounds of loans, guarantees and capital. There is also a worry that Brown's inadvertent title as saviour of the world might be slipping.

Opinion polls show government popularity falling in the new year. David Cameron may be internationally isolated in his opposition to a fiscal stimulus, but it does not seem to be hurting him. A YouGov poll in the Sunday Times showed Cameron's Tories rising four points to take a 13-point lead.

Privately, something close to desperation is starting to develop inside government. After watching the slide in bank shares on Friday, one cabinet minister did not altogether joke when he said: "The banks are f***ed, we're f***ed, the country's f***ed."
[There is some honesty in the British government]

Speaking at a Fabian Society gathering at the weekend, Lord Mandelson was typically and disarmingly frank. "I'm not going to say to you I think we've now at least reached a set of measures and actions that almost for sure are going to work."

Referring to the banks, he said: "What they've got themselves into is so complex technically, so challenging that nobody responsible would say that this is all that needs to be done in order to put right what has gone wrong. It's going to take more time, it's going to take more ingenuity."

Despite the polls and the myriad concerns over the banks, many cabinet ministers hope the current crises will ultimately expose the Tories as intellectually bankrupt.

At the Fabian conference, Ed Miliband and James Purnell likened the last six months to the winter of discontent in 1979. An ideological watershed had been reached, they argued.

"I think there is no question that 2008 will be seen as a similar historical moment," said Miliband. "This is a moment of profound crisis for the idea that, in economics, as far as possible we should leave markets to their own devices; the idea that government is the problem not the solution."

Purnell, from a more New Labour position, said: "For the last 30 or so years, politics in Britain has been determined by the image of the winter of discontent. The idea of achieving a fairer society through state action was damaged. I think that unbalanced politics. I don't think we will rebalance to the other side, where markets are entirely dismissed, but I think we can have a more balanced politics as a result."

Douglas Alexander, the international development secretary, added: "I think the real opportunity for the Labour party is to say that we did not just witness the demise of individual institutions, we ultimately witnessed the demise of an ideology that says that the only role for government is always to get out of the way and that the right response to a financial crisis is to nudge, privatise and deregulate
[Keynesian thinking is the ideology which needs to die]."

Yet, on the evidence so far, the public have not yet bought these somewhat abstract notions, and Cameron will not make the mistake of siding with bankers or opposing better regulation.

Last week Cameron met William Buiter, the economist who is a keen advocate of better regulation.

Buiter, according to Cameron, told him "the last time we built up this much debt was when we were fighting ... half of Europe. This time we've done it on our own.
[Great quote] It's quite a chilling thought. This is my worry is that it's like the man in the casino has lost it all on red and you know ... what's to stop Gordon putting it all on red all over again?"

Brown, however, will do so today, and who knows if he will win.
[He won't win anything good]

My reaction: Desperation is starting to develop inside British government. This article had some great quotes:

"The banks are f***ed, we're f***ed, the country's f***ed."

"What they [the banks] have got themselves into is so complex technically, so challenging that nobody responsible would say that this is all that needs to be done in order to put right what has gone wrong."

"the last time we built up this much debt was when we were fighting ... half of Europe. This time we've done it on our own. It's quite a chilling thought. This is my w orry is that it's like the man in the casino has lost it all on red and you know ... what's to stop Gordon putting it all on red all over again?"


Conclusion: Labour's days are numbered.

For more on Britain's troubles, see:

*****British Bond Auction Fizzles*****

*****Britain Monetizes Its National Debt*****


This entry was posted in Bailouts, News_Developments. Bookmark the permalink.

7 Responses to Desperation Developing Inside British Government

  1. Anonymous says:

    Guardian update: "Gordon Brown retreats on spending as market sounds warning". Also includes an audio interview.

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2009/mar/26/gordon-brown-bonds-fiscal-stimulus

    Most interesting is the statement: "The risk is that at some point the government will not be able to fund its huge debts, and that could push up interest rates for families and businesses at the worst possible time," (George Osborne)

  2. Boris says:

    Even further:

    Gilt Failure Has Stheeman Blaming King for Evaporating Demand

    March 26 (Bloomberg) -- Bank of England Governor Mervyn King is criticizing U.K. Prime Minister Gordon Brown’s spending plans while the official in charge of British bond sales blames the central bank for undermining demand for government debt.
    ...
    Investors say both are to blame for the failed debt sale. Gilts have ‘‘only one buyer and that’s Mervyn King,” said John Anderson, a money manager who oversees about $3 billion in pound-denominated assets at Rensburg Fund Management in London. “You don’t need to look anywhere beyond that. Make your mind up, please, government. Do you want to buy gilts or do you want to sell them? You can’t do both.”

    http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601085&sid;=atmEzzGjBOow&refer;=europe

    Mervyn King's comments trigger first gilt auction failure since 1995

    Gilt markets endured their most turbulent day in more than a decade after comments from Bank of England Governor Mervyn King helped trigger the first failure of a government bond auction since 1995.

    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/economics/5051149/Mervyn-Kings-comments-trigger-first-gilt-auction-failure-since-1995.html

  3. Anonymous says:

    But there are also other high-flyers like Geithner for example: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9GK9Rg9M6-g&feature;=player_embedded

    Best Tim quote: "It just requires will, it's not about ability." Then he said "We just need to keep at it."

    Great solution...

  4. Anonymous says:

    It's getting scary: Mr. Brown has the solution regarding the crisis: "Gordon Brown today warned that al-Qaida remains the biggest security threat to the UK" and talks about that 60.000 people got counter terrorism training.

    Link: http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2009/mar/22/brown-counter-terrorism-al-qaida

    Giving 60.000 people defibrillator training would certainly help more people. But only with (produced) scary news the gov. tries to get people away from the real issues.

  5. I am in the dark about the complexity of this problem. Banks have worthless assets on their books. They are insolvent. Allow them to go bankrupt, auction off their assets, and make sure healthy banks have enough capital to pick up the new business. Shareholders of bad banks, counterparties of odd derivatives, and any companies that own toxic assets eat the loss.
    Make sure any home foreclosure has an eviction and auction within 48 hours. problem solved.

  6. Anonymous says:

    @keating, all

    I have the same problem.

    Someone has the money, "created" during the global credit expansion. You or me might have bough into houses, pension, bikes, food, stocks on credit or on indirect credit - whatever. So we traded the money into something and at the other end someone received the money in exchange - always.

    Now somehow some people can't pay back what there borrowed and some other people made legal binding promises they can't keep (i.e. CDS) and so can't pay the winner of the game.

    At this point - as it is said - some banks have a strong negative balance. Whats to do now? To clean up the sheets someone has to realize the losses or get the losses on their balance sheet.

    To get some of the money they loaned to the market out of the market (i.e. circulation), they should default and so vaporize all the positive balance of their customer accounts with them. The principle is for me: to destroy debt, you have to destroy the corresponding amount of money you have given out on the loan.

    Currently this is avoided, the governments take the "bad loans and promises" on their sheet, so that banks, companies, customers, pension founds etc. do not have to realize the losses on their sheets (i.e. generated by the defaults of banks, etc.).

    This is done due to debt "shifting" from one party to the other - without resolving the underlying problem.

    The question that remains is: Who cares? 80% of the people own basically nothing (20%) and can't loose much, except debt. The some people owning the 80% of the wealth still have enough hard assets. Let the banks default and then re-start the whole game until big money and interest rigs it again.

    Is my reasoning so far o.k.?

  7. pai mei says:

    Some additional British honesty.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=94lW6Y4tBXs

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>