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Archive for the ‘UK economy’ Category

Obama’s newest giveaway to the banks

Posted by seumasach on September 14, 2010

Michael Hudson

Global Research

14th September, 2010

I can smell the newest giveaway looming a mile off. The Wall Street bailout, health-insurance giveaway and support of real estate prices rather than mortgage-debt write-downs were bad enough, not to mention the Oil War¹s Afghan extension. But now comes a topper: the $50 billion transportation infrastructure plan that Obama proposed in Milwaukee  cynically enough, on Labor Day. It looks like the Thatcherite Public-Private Partnership, Britain¹s notorious giveaway to the City of London underwriters. The financial giveaway had the effect of increasing prices for basic infrastructure services by building in heavy financial fees  guaranteed for the banks, who lent the money that banks and property owners used to pay in taxes in more progressive times.

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UK economy: death spiral begins

Posted by seumasach on August 10, 2010

Guardian

10th August, 2010

House prices fall as economy sees house prices fall

Government austerity measures are already plunging the British economy into reverse according to figures published today which reveal sagging high street sales and renewed falls in house prices.

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BoE’s MPC committee discussed further quantitative easing measures

Posted by smeddum on July 24, 2010

By Elliot Wilson
22nd July 2010

DailyMail

Bank of England policymakers discussed pumping more cash into the economy for the first time since February on fears that growth could be hit by Chancellor George Osborne’s austerity Budget.

Records of the Bank’s latest policy meeting highlight rising concern about the fragility of the economic recovery and worries that Britain could be heading for a double-dip recession. Read the rest of this entry »

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US and UK credit rating downgraded by Chinese

Posted by smeddum on July 18, 2010

Markets fall; Hong Kong shares; stockmarket

But after failure of Western credit rating agencies to foresee financial crisis, has Chinese upstart got a point?

JULY 13, 2010

While the European Union considers regulating the activities of the credit rating agencies Fitch, Moody’s and Standard & Poor’s – and perhaps even setting up a new agency to supplant them – a Chinese body has attempted to revolutionise the whole sector by summarily downgrading the US and Britain. Read the rest of this entry »

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UK public sector could have £4 trillion of hidden debts

Posted by smeddum on July 18, 2010

The UK’s public sector debt could be nearly £4 trillion higher than headline figures suggest, according to new research that highlights the scale of the economic challenges facing the Government.

By Jonathan Sibun, Assistant City Editor
14 Jul 2010

Telegraph

Clegg and Cameron outside the Treasury - UK public sector could  have £4 trillion of hidden debts 

The economic hallenge facing the new Government could be even greater than feared Photo: Paul Grover

The Office for National Statistics (ONS) released a study revealing that the public purse could be faced with £4.84 trillion of liabilities compared with the current public sector net debt figure of £903bn.

David Hobbs of the ONS described the public sector balance sheet as an “open-ended concept” as he outlined liabilities that are considered to be “off-balance sheet” or not covered in official debt measures. Read the rest of this entry »

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London purchases $45 billion worth of US treasuries in one month

Posted by seumasach on May 21, 2010

Net purchases of US Treasury securities from abroad doubled between February and March, from $48 billion to $109 billion. About half the total $45 billion came from London, that is, international banks; another half came from Asia ($45 billion), with China ($19 billion) and Japan ($15 billion) the largest contributors. The geographic breakdown suggests that in addition to the $50 billion a month in carry-trade financing of the deficit by international banks, reserve accumulation by Asian countries pushed another $50 billion or so into US coffers.

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UK politicians fail the Afghanistan, economics and banking tests

Posted by seumasach on May 2, 2010

Christopher King

Redress

2nd May, 2010

Christopher King argues that Britain’s leading politicians lack the courage to acknowledge the only moral conclusion to the Afghan fiasco – withdrawal – and lack the vision, integrity and competence to tackle the country’s economic and banking crises.

Our politicians are trying desperately to convince us that they know how to run the country. Well, we’ve been listening to them and they’re rubbish. Their entire economic argument chases its tail around how much public expenditure each party will cut, how much we will be taxed, what and when. It’s all about the deficit and a mythical economic recovery, the basis for which or the possibility of it not occurring were never mentioned. And recovery is doubtful. In parallel, the Institute for Fiscal Studies says that there are massive spending holes in all their published budgets because they’re concealing how enormous the government’s deficit is. Call me a prophet of doom – I don’t care. Doom is on the horizon.

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Shock as British deficit equals that of Greece

Posted by seumasach on February 21, 2010

Despite Britain’s wholehearted commitment to destroying the Euro the pound is once again falling against that currency. To compare Britain’s financial situation to that of Greece is flattering: Goldman Sach’s machinations in Greece notwithstanding, Britain is second to none in the art of off the books accounting. We are running major wars out of a secret contingency fund, printing money to shore up our banks as off the books emergency funds and deferring  costs on infrastructural projects of dubious quality and great expense run for the benefit of friends of New Labour. No one knows the true state of our finances: we know only that they are unimaginably bad. To add to our woes we are outside the Eurozone and face an Iceland style collapse, including debts owed in foreign currencies which we can never conceivably cover. Unlike Greece we have no political will to remedy the situation unless you consider a war against our creditors to be such a remedy.

Sean O’Grady

Independent

19th February, 2010

Britain’s public finances are in a worse position than those of Greece, according to the latest figures on government borrowing. The Office for National Statistics said yesterday that January alone saw a net shortfall of £4.3bn, far worse than City forecasts and in a month which has always previously shown a healthy surplus. It puts the UK on track for a deficit of £180bn this year, or 12.8 per cent of GDP, economists said, shading the Greek figure, hitherto the worst in the European Union, of 12.7 per cent. In the pre-Budget report the Chancellor forecast a deficit of £178bn for the current year. Warnings that the UK could face a Greek-style crisis of confidence have been building for some weeks, and yesterday saw a sell-off of sterling and British government securities, or gilts, on the disappointing news.

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Why the Greek tragedy contains lessons for us all

Posted by seumasach on February 15, 2010

Ian MacWhirter

Glasgow Herald

15th February, 2010

Hah! Shows that the whole idea of a single currency was a nonsense. It’ll never work, you know. Not without a superstate. You wouldn’t catch us in the farmyard with the Pigs – the unflattering acronym being used to refer to the Mediterranean economies of Portugal, Ireland, Greece and Spain. What basket cases!

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U.K. Sovereign Debt: A ‘Fat Tail’ Risk for 2010

Posted by seumasach on December 2, 2009

Seeking Alpha

1st Decmber, 2009

As investors quickly forget about Dubai, and shield their eyes (apparently using now almost limitless US dollars or Japanese yen) from any potential sovereign road bumps ahead [Nov 27, 2009: UK Telegraph – Greece Tests the Limits of Sovereign Debt as it Grinds Toward Slump], Morgan Stanely (MS) Europe is out with an interesting report for 2010 that highlights an interesting “fat tail” risk: the UK becoming the first of the G10 to have a major fiscal crisis as elections lead to a hung parliament.

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Eurozone recovery leaves UK behind

Posted by smeddum on October 24, 2009

Eurozone recovery leaves UK behind

Ninemsn
By Ralph Atkins in Frankfurt and Chris Giles in London,

Financial Times, 23 Oct 2009

Prospects for European economic recovery became more confused on Friday after official data showed the UK still mired in its longest recession since the second world war, at the same time as a eurozone survey was much more upbeat about recovery in continental Europe. Read the rest of this entry »

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