Most people think of the 2008 crash as a subprime mortgage crisis. This is only partially true – and misleadingly so. The real crisis was in the unregulated “shadow banking” sector where “securitised investment vehicles” (SIVs) are traded. A SIV is created by repackaging the income from loans (including mortgages) …
Read More »Brexit will not cause a banking flight to Europe… its much worse than that!
For an economy largely owned by the City of London, the post-Brexit future of UK banking and finance is an existential concern. The conventional wisdom is that unless the UK government can negotiate an agreement with the EU to allow the current passporting arrangements to continue then we will see …
Read More »Is the UK economy plunging into recession?
The problem with recessions is that you don’t know you’re in one until it is too late. That is because nobody actually knows what the economy is doing right now. We have to wait until government and corporate statisticians compile and analyse the data – a process that can take …
Read More »The choice you won’t be offered on 8 June
Between now and June 8th, the most common question posed by politicians, journalists and drunk men down the pub will be some variant of “how are you going to pay for it?” From defence spending to international aid and from energy price caps to social care, every electoral promise will …
Read More »British banking collapse predates Brexit
Forget Brexit, it’s much worse than that according to Paul J. Davies at the Wall Street Journal: “Banks in Britain are still languishing in the doldrums brought on by the financial crisis of 2008. Weak banking activity and low investment returns have caused revenue to shrink, leading to widespread cost-cutting …
Read More »The gig economy is eating Britain from the inside
Believe it or not, the UK is currently experiencing ‘full-employment.’ That is, while 4.7 percent of working age people are officially unemployed, most are what economists used to call ‘frictional’ – they are moving between jobs or moving between work and education. At face value, this is good news. Indeed, …
Read More »The last act of a dying industry
Within any country’s economy are several critical industries that are considered “strategic.” In 19th century Britain, for example, coal, steel and shipbuilding were deemed to be essential. Even today, the ability to construct military vessels is, at least to a limited extent, considered strategic. Steel has a less obvious position. …
Read More »The dark shadow that still haunts banking
The digital economy has largely been welcomed as a “disruptive force,” obliging old fashioned businesses to compete for custom with new lean internet companies like Uber and Google. But disruptive businesses in banking may not be the positive development intended. As Leonid Bershidsky at Bloomberg points out: “In a rivalry …
Read More »Blame Brexit on the reality of the “fourth industrial revolution”
The so-called fourth industrial revolution (aka the gig economy) was supposed to result in a shiny new future in which a new class of youthful digital entrepreneurs generated prosperous jobs for all. In reality, the digital economy created a climate of fear and insecurity at the bottom of the British labour …
Read More »Brexit Britain muddling along
The scale of economic dishonesty in the wake of the Brexit result last year takes “fake news” to stratospheric levels. In this, both sides of the Brexit argument are equally culpable. The slightest hint of economic bad news is pounced upon by the “Remoaners” as proof that the UK economy …
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