In These New Times

A new paradigm for a post-imperial world

Posts Tagged ‘financial collapse’

Enormous die-off of bees happening in U.S.

Posted by seumasach on March 5, 2009


Entomologists are studying the reasons for an enormous bee die off happening across the U.S. If they cannot find a solution the 80 per cent of fruits and vegetables that require pollination may not make it to market.

 

 

 

© Copyright 2000 – 2008 The Hindu

5th March, 2009

For further background on causes of approaching catastrophe see:

Is Colony Collapse the Price of E.M.F. Progress?

The Disappearing Bees

Birds, Bees and Mankind

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Kiss the Banks Goodbye and Refocus on Rebuilding the American People

Posted by seumasach on March 5, 2009

This can’t be happening

4th March, 2009

The futility and stupidity of the Fed’s and the Obama administration’s policy of pumping ever more money into failing banks and insurance companies in a vain effort to get them lending again was demonstrated—if anyone was paying attention—by the collapse in auto sales this past month, with all the leading companies, Ford, GM and Toyota, reporting sales down by about 40%.

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William Engdahl-Taking on the banking cabal Pt 2

Posted by seumasach on March 4, 2009

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UK’s Brown urges global supervision of banks

Posted by seumasach on March 2, 2009

More baloney from Brown. He’s trying to fool everyone into conceding global institutions under Anglo-american control. He’s is, of course, the last person to want to open up tax havens. Since most of them are under British jurisdiction anyway, what is  to stop him from doing this without global institutions.

Brown’s nationalised banks just mean the banks do as they like and the taxpayer picks up the bill. In other words, it is simply fraud on an unprecedented scale

As for his harsh words about the bankers, they know this is a necessary little game, and know the the funds will continue to flow their way. They know this little charlatan with his mock gravitas is entirely under their control.

By Christina Fincher

LONDON, Feb 28 (Reuters) – British Prime Minister Gordon Brown called for more rigorous global supervision of the banking system on Saturday, saying no hedge fund or tax haven should be allowed to fall through the cracks.

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The Brown plan for global oligarchy

Posted by seumasach on March 1, 2009

 

Here, New Labour mouthpiece, Will Hutton, gives a fairly comprehensive outline of the Brown plan, a “global new deal”. This involves using the UN. IMF, World Bank and EU to spearhead the kind of policies already put into the practice in the US/UK i.e. massive handouts to financier interests and the bankrupting of the nation state. Brown understands that reform is necessary within organisations like the IMF, UN etc. In other words, in order to maintain their credibility some other nations must be given a place in the inner circle. This not the kind of refoundation of global organisations we need for the new multipolar world.

“But now, more than ever, we need a stronger, free-trading EU with pan-EU financial regulation that speaks with one voice as a core constituent of a new order.”

This is a reference to already existing plans to create a huge trans-Atlantic free trade area. It is also in this context, and this alone , that we should understand Mandelsohn’s pro-Euro sentiment.

Will Hutton

Guardian

1st March, 2009

 

This week, Gordon Brown becomes only the fifth British prime minister to address both American houses of Congress. He will speak against the background of the gravest economic times in living memory. Each of his listeners will know that, without massive American government support, both the US banking system and its car industry would now be bust. Instead of unemployment rising by a sickening 600,000 a month, it would be going up by more than a million.

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Iceland Gets Norwegian Central Banker(and former McKinsey partner)

Posted by seumasach on February 27, 2009

It seems quite unbelievable, as well as unconstitutional, that a foreigner should be appointed as head of Iceland’s central bank. That he is a former McKinsey partner makes it deeply worrying. According to Wikipedia,  McKinsey was up to it’s kneck in Enron and was favoured, amidst controveresy, by Tony Blair to reform the cabinet office.

Iceland Review

27th February, 2009

Svein Harald Oeygard, a Norwegian economist, has been hired as interim governor of the Central Bank of Iceland. The Althingi parliament passed a bill on changes to the bank’s senior management yesterday, making its previous governors redundant.

The Central Bank of Iceland. Copyright: Icelandic Photo Agency.

“This man has extensive experience from Norwegian administration and company consultancy, which should come in handy,” Ólafur Ísleifsson, a lecturer in economy at Reykjavík University, told mbl.is.

One of Oeygard’s first tasks will be to attend a meeting with a delegation from the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

Former Central Bank governors Eiríkur Gudnason (left) and Davíd Oddsson. Copyright: Icelandic Photo Agency.

The Central Bank’s former governors, Davíd Oddsson and Eiríkur Gudnason, called their employees to a meeting yesterday and thanked them for their cooperation. The attendees applauded the governors before they left the bank for good,Morgunbladid reports.

Gudnason has worked at the Central Bank for 40 years. Oddsson, who is Iceland’s longest-serving prime minister, was appointed to the bank in the fall of 2005.

The third Central Bank governor, Ingimundur Fridriksson, stepped down shortly after receiving a letter from Prime Minister Jóhanna Sigurdardóttir requesting his resignation and has now been offered a position at the Norwegian Central Bank, according to DV.is.

After Althingi passed the Central Bank bill, it was signed by President of Iceland Ólafur Ragnar Grímsson. Then it was published in Stjórnartídindi, the law and ministerial gazette, taking legal effect, enabling a new Central Bank governor to be appointed.

Law professor Sigurdur Líndal told Fréttabladid that he doubts a foreign citizen can be hired to the position, explaining that the constitution states that no one can become a public official in Iceland without holding the Icelandic citizenship.

“I think it is absolutely certain that a governor cannot be appointed to the Central Bank unless he or she is an Icelandic citizen,” Líndal said. “But there is a question of whether a foreign citizen can become acting Central Bank governor.”

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LPACTV: Nationalization, No– Bankruptcy, Yes!

Posted by seumasach on February 25, 2009

Click on this link to view video:

 

http://www.larouchepac.com/node/8040

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Iceland’s Central Bank Chair Calls for Investigation

Posted by seumasach on February 25, 2009

“Oddsson claimed that individuals of nationwide fame were involved with some of these companies, both from the cultural and political arenas

Oddsson’s grip on power is remarkable given that he oversaw the unfolding debacle of Iceland’s financial system. Does this give us a clue why?

Iceland Review

25t February, 2009

Governor and chairman of the Central Bank of Iceland Davíd Oddsson stated in an interview on RÚV’s news magazine Kastljós yesterday that several hundred private limited companies had received special services in the banking system, calling for an investigation into their operations.

Oddsson claimed that individuals of nationwide fame were involved with some of these companies, both from the cultural and political arenas, Morgunbladid reports.

Central Bank governor and chairman Davíd Oddsson. Copyright: Icelandic Photo Agency.

“It has been sidelined. I think it is completely unacceptable how it has been handled,” Oddsson said. He explained that people had come to him privately with information on various cases that need to be investigated thoroughly and that they had confided in him because they didn’t trust anyone else.

This is how he had found out about the private limited companies that had received special services, Oddsson described.

In some cases, discussions that had taken place in relation to these services had not been recorded, as is mandatory, Oddsson stated, discussed instead over cell phones or by other means.

Oddsson also said on Kastljós that in February last year the Central Bank had hired “one of Europe’s most qualified financial stability experts” to work on a contingency plan. The expert’s report had expected the banking system to “go bankrupt” in October 2008.

Oddsson stated that the report had been sent to the government. The Central Bank is currently looking into whether the report will be released to the media.

Furthermore, Oddsson claimed that he had requested to attend a cabinet meeting on September 30 where he told the government, “I believe that the Icelandic banking system in its entirety will collapse within two to three weeks.”

The government’s reaction to these words was that it was unnecessary to “dramatize” things, Oddsson stated. He had then repeated his words, saying that it was impossible to “dramatize” this account.

Moreover, Oddsson commented on the UK government’s implementation of the anti-terrorism legislation, claiming that transactions worth GBP 400 and 800 million (USD 582 million and 1.2 billion, EUR 454 and 907 million) from Kaupthing’s subsidiary in the UK, Singer & Friedlander, had influenced the decision.

Oddsson argued that British authorities may have been concerned that Landsbanki might do the same, relocating funds from its subsidiary in the UK, and therefore invoked the anti-terrorism legislation.

With regard to Kaupthing, Oddsson revealed that he had sent a letter to the police on December 2, 2008 to inform them of the circumstances of the acquisition of Sheik Mohamed bin Khalifa Al-Thani of Qatar in shares in Kaupthing a few months earlier.

The Financial Supervisory Authority (FME) is currently investigating suspicions that Kaupthing financed the acquisition itself by granting a loan to Al-Thani.

Following the investigation, five employees of New Kaupthing were laid off, but director Finnur Sveinbjörnsson said it had not had anything to do with Oddsson’s letter to the police, claiming he had not known that Oddsson had sent such a letter.

The Unit for the Investigation and Prosecution of Economic and Environmental Crimes at the National Commissioner of the Icelandic Police confirmed that Oddsson had sent the letter. Previously, the letter was said to have arrived from an anonymous source.

Click here to read more about Al-Thani and here to read more about the government’s bill on changes to the Central Bank’s senior management, which, once passed, will automatically make Oddsson redundant.

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Latvian government becomes second European government to collapse as a result of international financial crisis

Posted by seumasach on February 25, 2009

Latvia’s centre-right government resigned last Friday, against the background of a worsening economic crisis. This is now the second European government to collapse as a result of the international financial crisis, following the government of Iceland, which resigned in January after mass protests had filled the streets of Reykjavik.

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Posted in Battle for Europe | Tagged: , | 1 Comment »

Iceland’s Meltdown

Posted by seumasach on February 24, 2009

Nigel Holmes and Megan McArdle

Atlantic.com

December, 2008

All financial innovation involves … the creation of debt secured in greater or lesser adequacy by real assets,” wrote the economist John Kenneth Galbraith in 1993. And “all crises have involved debt that, in one fashion or another, has become dangerously out of scale in relation to the underlying means of payment.”

Iceland’s neophyte bankers no doubt wish they’d paid more attention to this warning. In the past two months, many countries have seen their banks brought low by excess leverage, but none has been punished so thoroughly as Iceland, where the currency and the government’s credit rating have joined the banking system on the ash heap of history. “Too big to fail” turned into “too big to save”—the banks’ holdings were so large relative to Iceland’s economy that the government had no credibility as a lender of last resort. The economy looks likely to shrink by 10 percent this year, and future growth may not be enough to cover the interest on the massive foreign loans that Iceland needs simply to keep functioning.

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The biggest bank robbery in Iceland’s history?

Posted by seumasach on February 23, 2009

 

Iceland Weather Report

23rd February, 2009

“Another day, another scandal,” someone wrote in the comments the other day – and ain’t it the truth. A day hardly passes around here with some dirty deed being dredged up from the cesspool that is Iceland’s economic collapse.

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