Yeah, it's unbelievable isn't it?
I suppose what is at stake here is the future of the economic system. If people loose savings in a bank run then the whole industrys fecked. I mean who has any trust in the financial industry after this debarcle?
What annoys me is that it is still being called the 'American Sub Prime' problem, when actually the problems are all about de-regulation of the banking industry. This has allowed them to basically ignore fractional reserve banking, and package up their loans and sell them on. They can then take them off the books, sell them on and loan out more. This has basically meant unlimited loans availiable, with no deposits to back them up. There are no credit checks done and no reserves required of those to who the CDO's are sold onto, and so no balances or checks in place.
And why? Why have they done this? Why erode faith in the banking system? For short term profit?
No. Because GDP growth in this country has finished. GDP growth is strongly linked to the raw energy used by a country. The UK slowly reducing its oil usage year on year......
This means the only growth this country has seen has been due to increases in gas usage, efficiency gains and growing workforce (immigration). The banking sector has been requiring bigger and bigger booms and busts to keep up the illusion of continued growth, but actually the game is nearly over. No growth of the economy, means no money availiable for interest repayments. So in a zero sum game, which bank wins? Why the bank that manages to sell all of its bad debts onto another bank of course. This may work for the time being, but when GDP takes up its permanant negative trend for the descent path then even the biggest banks cannot survive.
The government may at this point have to run a nationalised system or something if it doesn't want us to descend into batering or local (and hence untaxable) economies. I know why Blair aged so much now..... pity the fool