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Economics (I)
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★ Economics (I)

It came at an awesome price.  Worse, the banks were now the walking dead.  ibid.

 

Around a quarter of all bank loans are so dodgy they have had to be insured: an astonishing indictment of the banks’ lending practices.  ibid.

 

£1.3 trillion in guarantees, loans and investments to the banks.  ibid.

 

What bankers do with our money is of vital public interest.  ibid.

 

Finance picks up the profits, the taxpayer picks up the risks.  ibid.

 

 

It wasn’t the government that got us into this mess – if what you mean by mess is an ugly recession, an unbalanced economy, profound uncertainty over recovery, grossly indebted consumers, disadvantaged communities hit hard again and a budget deficit of £175 billion.  What got us into this mess above all was the 30-year rise of Big Finance before which governments unfurled the white flag.  Bankers used their power to bend the rules at home and abroad, to lend ever more riskily and supported by less capital, until, finally, a vastly overextended banking system backed by very little capital collapsed.  The result is today's economic calamity.

 

There were many culprits in this story, but the damage stemmed from an obsession to keep government small and markets big.  Thus, mergers that created banks that were too big to fail went ahead and their daffy mathematical models went unchallenged.  We need to reform our financial system from top to bottom, but neither shadow chancellor George Osborne nor shadow business secretary Ken Clarke began to address this question.  Their twin attack was on the state – Osborne's because it was borrowing too much, Clarke’s because it was regulating too much.  Will Hutton, The Observer online article 11th October 2009

 

 

Tonight, Gordon Brown has been facing some anguished Labour MPs.  Five members of his cabinet have quit; one of them telling the prime minister he should go to.  Some of his backbenchers are openly calling for his head.  Dispatches with Andrew Rawnsley: Gordon Brown: Crash Gordon, Channel 4 2009

 

‘They had made a pact with the devil with the city of London.’  ibid.  Vince Cable  

 

The city was providing a quarter of all corporation tax.  ibid.

 

‘No return to boom and bust.’  ibid.  Brown ad nauseam

 

That luck was about to run out.  ibid.

 

Gordon Brown wanted everyone to know it was not his fault.  ibid.  

 

The new business secretary was ennobled as Lord Mandelson of Hartlepool & Foy.  ibid.

 

 

2001: the largest bankruptcy to that date in US history was filed.  10,000 people lost their jobs.  The Crooked E starring Brian Dennehy & Christian Kane & Mike Farrell & Shannon Elizabeth & Cameron Bancroft & Nancy Anne Sakovich & Natalie Brown & Ambert St Pierre et al, director Penelope Spheeris, CBS January 2003, opening commentary, CBS 2003

 

April 1, 2001: Enron stock: $55.70.  ibid.  captions

 

Enron’s the wild west.  ibid.  boss bloke to hero

 

Traded thousands of partnerships to hide the debt but in the end it wasn’t enough.  ibid.

 

Any half-assed diligence will dig up can after can of worms.  ibid.  boss bloke to hero

 

They were all a part of it … I call it goddamned greed.  ibid.

 

We are the bad guys.  We are the criminals.  ibid.

 

As right now you’re all laid off and you have thirty minutes to clear out.  ibid.  bird boss

 

 

Today in Britain the government spends more than all private individuals and companies put together.  Martin Durkin, Britains Trillion Pound Horror Story, Channel 4 2010

 

Today in Britain the public sector is bigger than the private sector.  ibid.

 

In the next five years annual government spending will climb from £697 billion to £757 billion.  ibid.

 

We now have a national debt of £4.8 trillion.  ibid.    

 

Counted out in £50 notes our national debt would form a stack no less than 6,561 miles.  Or to put it another way, if we sold off all the houses and flats in the whole of the UK, we would still be the best part of a trillion pounds short of paying our debt.  ibid.

 

British governments have been steadily debasing the currency or printing money for decades through the deliberate expansion of credit.  ibid.

 

Its very much in the interests of politicians to spend money.  ibid.

 

The idea that public spending will stimulate growth is the biggest myth of the twentieth century and is the cause of Britains economic decline.  ibid.

 

What do they all do?  ibid.

 

The idea that we need state monopolies in order to look after the poor is obviously untrue.  ibid.

 

 

Welcome to the world of money.  Bread.  Cash.  Dosh.  Dough.  Loot.  Lucre.  Moolah.  Readies.  The Wherewithal.  Call it what you like  money can make us or break us.  Niall Ferguson, The Ascent of Money e1: Dreams of Avarice, Channel 4 2008

 

How on earth could a little local difficulty with subprime mortgages in the United States unleash an economic tsunami big enough to obliterate some of Wall Street’s most illustrious names, to force nationalisations of banks on both sides of the Atlantic and to bring the entire world economy to the very brink of recession if not downright depression?  ibid.

 

The Ascent of Money has been an indispensable part of the Ascent of Man.  ibid.

 

The US stock of money is now $8,7 trillion.  ibid.  

 

This hedge-fund paid George Soros a cool $2.4 billion.  ibid.

 

Money is only worth what other people will give in exchange for it.  ibid.

 

Money is about trust.  ibid.

 

Our entire civilisation is based on the lending and borrowing of money.  ibid.

 

The Hindu or Arabic numerals made all kinds of calculation easier.  ibid.

 

For the first time money lending had evolved into banking.  ibid.

 

The big mystery is why the world’s most successful capitalist economy is based on a foundation of more or less painless economic failure.  ibid.

 

From 1996 to 2006 there were between one and two million bankruptcy cases a year in the United States.  ibid.

 

 

In today’s world real power lies in the hands of an elite group of anonymous men in open-plan offices.  The men who control the world’s bond market … Bonds are the magical link between the world of high finance and the world of political power.  Niall Ferguson, The Ascent of Money e2: Human Bondage  

 

After the rise of banks the birth of the bond market was the next big revolution in the history of finance.  It created a whole new way for governments to borrow money.  ibid.

 

There are bonds out there worth around $85 trillion.  ibid.

 

Between around 1810 and 1836 the five sons of Meyer Amschel Rothschild rose from the obscurity of the Frankfurt ghetto to attain a position of unequalled power in international finance.  ibid.

 

The South’s idea was to use cotton as collateral to back its bonds.  ibid.

 

By June 1989 inflation in Argentina had reached a monthly rate of 100%.  ibid.

 

 

The next step in the story of the Ascent of Money was the rise of the joint-stock limited-liability company.  But the ability of the company to transform our lives would depend on another innovation  the stock market.  Niall Ferguson, The Ascent of Money e3: Blowing Bubbles  

 

Stock markets really can be like soap bubbles  we never quite know when they’re going to burst.  ibid.

 

Ponzi scheme  after the legendary Italian-American con-man Charles Ponzi: to pay out the generous returns it’s promised to the first lot of suckers, a Ponzi scheme needed to take in more money from the next lot of suckers.  ibid. 

 

The Mississippi bubble of 1719 was the first stock market bubble in history.  ibid.  

 

Enron: It pioneered many of the dubious business practices that continue to plague us today.  ibid.

 

 

The most basic financial impulse of all is to save for a rainy day.  Niall Ferguson, The Ascent of Money e4: Risky Business  

 

We’re stuck with random uncertainty.  ibid.

 

It leaves you wondering why we bother spending so much on insurance policies every year.  ibid.

 

A new idea began to emerge in Japan  that the state should take care of risk.  ibid. 

 

In theory derivatives offer a new way to hedge against an uncertain future.  ibid.  

 

 

 

 

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