In These New Times

A new paradigm for a post-imperial world

Posts Tagged ‘Financial crisis’

Bank of England ready to pump money into UK economy

Posted by seumasach on March 4, 2009

I,m intrigued by this notion of pumping money “into the economy”. Could they be more specific? Will I wake to find envelopes stuffed with £20 notes have been pushed through my letter box? Or will it all go to help buy certain worthless securities which our financial institutions have been accumulating? Definately a “no-brainer”. Click here for an explanation of quantitaive easing

Guardian

4th March, 2009

The Bank of England is expected to reduce interest rates to yet another record low tomorrow lunchtime; but with their rate-cutting ammunition all but exhausted, governor Mervyn King and his colleagues are expected to press the button on a much more drastic policy — quantitative easing.

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L’affaire UBS : une acte de souveraineté impériale Lutte contre la fraude fiscale ou main mise sur le système financier international ?

Posted by seumasach on March 4, 2009

This throws some light on Brown’s sudden conversion to eliminating tax havens through new international powers i.e. obviously not the ones within British jurisdiction.

Jean-Claude Paye

Voltairenet.org

3rd March, 2009

Washington a partiellement réussi à contraindre l’Union des Banques Suisses (UBS) à violer la législation helvétique et à dénoncer ses clients états-uniens susceptibles de frauder le fisc. Malgré les apparences, observe le sociologue Jean-Claude Paye, cette manœuvre ne vise pas à obtenir des informations, car Washington les détenait probablement déjà, mais à casser la place bancaire suisse. L’Empire tente d’éliminer par la force les « paradis fiscaux » qu’il ne contrôle pas, au profit des siens qu’il protège.

[Washington has partially succeeded in forcing l’Union des Banques Suisses (UBS) to violate Swiss law and reveal the names of its US clients liable tp prosecution for fraud. In spite of appearances, observes sociologist, Jean-Claude Paye, this manoeuvre doesn’t aim to obtain information, since Washington in all probability, already it, but to undermine Swiss banking. The empire intends to eliminate by force tax havens which it doesn’t control, in favour of those which it does.]

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Eurozone ready to rescue members

Posted by seumasach on March 3, 2009

FT

3rd March, 2009

Eurozone authorities would help a member state in serious economic difficulties before it needed to approach the International Monetary Fund because of a debt-default risk, according to a senior European Union policymaker.

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The Last Picture Show-President Barack Obama’s Fiscal Year 2009 Budget

Posted by seumasach on March 2, 2009

Richard C. Cook

Rense.com

3rd March, 2009

“The Last Picture Show” was a 1971 film depicting the decay of small town America. It took place in the fictitious town of Anarene, Texas.

We hear a distant tune reminiscent of America’s high and lonely places and the sound of a dry wind blowing. It’s March 2010 in the tiny West Texas town of Anarene. Nothing much happens here any more. The last business shut down a couple of years ago. It was a cement plant that went broke after the housing bubble burst and the banks stopped lending. The kids out of high school drive their jalopies from one end of Main Street to the other past boarded-up storefronts. Read the rest of this entry »

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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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Citizens Advice sounds warning over spiralling household debt

Posted by seumasach on February 26, 2009

24Dash.com

26th February, 2009

It would take an average of 93 years for people contacting a debt charity for help to repay their borrowings at an affordable rate, research showed today.

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Councils switch billions to Treasury

Posted by seumasach on February 26, 2009

 

Council deposits in low interest Treasury accounts have soared as finance directors sacrifice high returns for safety, following the Icelandic banking crash.

Local Government Chronicle

26th February, 2009

Figures obtained by LGC reveal councils are continuing to place billions of pounds in the Debt Management Account Deposit Facility (DMADF) as commercial banks are deemed too risky.

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Global recovery rests on a fresh US approach to China

Posted by seumasach on February 13, 2009

 

Martin Jacques

Guardian

13th February, 2009

The key relationship for any global recovery is between the US andChina. By the same token, any serious deterioration in their relationship would propel the world towards a second Great Depression. The Chinese citizen has funded the credit-driven American consumer boom: or, to put it another way, China’s government has enabled the US to run an enormous current account deficit by buying huge quantities of US treasury bills. If China stops this, the value of the US dollar would plunge, and a bitter trade war, engulfing the rest of the world, would ensue.

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New tipping-point in March 2009: ‘When the world becomes aware that this crisis is worse than the 1930s crisis’

Posted by seumasach on December 20, 2008

 

16th December, 2008
LEAP/E2020 anticipates than the unfolding global systemic crisis will experience in March 2009 a new tipping point of similar magnitude to the September 2008 one. According to our team, at that period of the year, the general public will become aware of three major destabilizing processes at work in the global economy, i.e.:  

• the length of the crisis 
• the explosion of unemployment worldwide 
• the risk of sudden collapse of all capital-based pension systems 

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German ridicule for UK policies

Posted by seumasach on December 10, 2008

BBC

10th December, 2008

The German finance minister has launched an outspoken attack on the UK government’s plans to help pull Britain out of the economic downturn.

In an unusual breach of standard diplomacy, Peer Steinbruck attacked the UK’s decision to cut VAT and raise the national debt to record levels.

Mr Steinbruck said the UK’s switch from financial prudence to heavy borrowing was both “crass” and “breathtaking”.

His comments came in an interview with Newsweek magazine.

“There is a broad international consensus that a fiscal stimulus is right thing for economies now,” said a Treasury spokesman.

‘Debt generation’

Criticising the UK government’s decision to cut VAT from 17.5% to 15%, Mr Steinbruck questioned how effective this will be.

“Are you really going to buy a DVD player because it now costs £39.10 instead of £39.90?” he said.

“All this will do is raise Britain’s debt to a level that will take a whole generation to work off.”

Saying the UK government was now “tossing around billions”, Mr Steinbruck questioned why Britain was now closely following the high public spending model put forward by 20th Century economist John Maynard Keynes.

“The switch from decades of supply-side politics all the way to a crass Keynesianism is breathtaking,” he said.

“When I ask about the origins of the [financial] crisis, economists I respect tell me it is the credit-financed growth of recent years and decades.

“Isn’t this the same mistake everyone is suddenly making again, under all the public pressure?”

German spending

Chancellor Alistair Darling announced in last month’s pre-Budget report that the government would inject an extra £20bn into the UK economy in a bid to get it moving again.

At least £15bn of this total will come from increased government borrowing, which is expected to take the UK national debt to £118bn next year.

While Mr Steinbruck has accused the UK of over-spending on the economic recovery, the German government has put 480bn euros (£370.4bn; $645bn) into a rescue package for its banks.

Most other European government’s have also increased public spending to try to ease the impact of the economic downturn.

France recently announced plans to spend 26bn euros, and the European Commission wants to spend 200bn euros across the European Union.

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Pension schemes face £155bn shortfall

Posted by seumasach on December 10, 2008

Telegraph

8th December, 2008

The Pension Protection Fund (PPF), the pensions lifeboat fund, said yesterday that 6,690 pension schemes had a deficit at the end of last month, compared with 6,468 in October. The schemes in deficit at the end of last month face a collective funding shortfall of £155bn. Just one year ago, this figure was £58.3bn.

Once pension funds with a surplus are included in the figures, the total funding shortfall faced by all defined benefit schemes was £136bn in November, compared with a deficit of £97.3bn at the end of October.

In November, the total number of schemes in surplus was 1,047 – just 14pc of all schemes – compared to 1,273 in October. In November 2007 there were 2,400 schemes in surplus.

Last month alone there was a 0.5pc decrease in assets due to falling UK and global equities. At the same time, lower gilt yields in general led to an increase in liabilities of approximately 5.2pc.

“Over the past year, the falling equity markets and bond yields have led to an overall worsening of the funding position. Lower bond yields resulted in a 4pc increase in aggregate liabilities, while weaker equities have reduced assets by 18.7pc,” the PPF said.

The PPF was established three years ago to pay compensation for members of defined pension schemes when their employers became insolvent. Pensions experts predict an increase in claims in the current environment.

Woolworths, the stricken retailer whose retail and distribution arms are in administration, could become one of the biggest burdens on the PPF if a last-minute rescue deal cannot be struck to save the retailer.

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