Cabrone wrote:Yes but why couldn't the government do the same thing at a fraction of the cost?
Banking could be seen as a public utility and a state bank set up. However, in the past few years, most utilities have been sold off. It's not clear to me that it would be necessarily cheaper.
Why do I have to pay for the large salaries\bonuses\profits\shareholders that the banks need to pay?
I think that those go to people who do rather different things than the plain vanilla banking which I have described. I doubt that they are merited, but it's a different argument, I believe.
Secondly banks are not democratically accountable and probably couldn't care less how hard they squeeze the public.
At least politicians can be booted out every so often and so (you would think) would be careful on how they ran the money supply.
Could you have sacked your local electricity board manager?
The gov't would have to charge an amount to perform all the admin + checks before handing over the money and maybe a small amount of interest (something like 1%) to cover for bad debts but that should be it.
They would need to employ people to do the checks, manage accounts; they would have to buy/renty buildings. Was the old electricty board significantly cheaper than the current lot?
If they really screwed up by lending to too many dodgy borrowers then they might need to raise money via gilts or taxation (or just temporarily increasing the % rate) but the thought of a massive political hammering should (in theory) be enough to make sure that their credit checks were rigorous.
Again, compare the previous nationalized utilities. And, in general, you can't get 'owt for nowt.
I've been paying £000's in interest on my house for the last 12 years (and have many more to go).
It seems a lot to charge me for a few admin checks that the bank performed back in the summer of 1998......
A small amount will be for admin checks etc. Most of it is the amount they have to pay to borrow the money, plus run the bank and pay dividends,
Peter.
Does anyone know where the love of God goes when the waves turn the seconds to hours?