UK’s Brown is ‘angry’ with banks for financial crisis


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Brown Is ‘Angry’ With Banks for Financial Crisis, Mirror Says

Brown has it backwards, as most do. Lack of lending is a ‘good thing.’

It means ‘full employment’ can be sustained with much lower taxes for any desired level of government spending.

Too bad they are all out of paradigm and are letting things deteriorate while they agonize over the size of the deficit.

strong>Highlights

Home Retail Leads U.K. Retailers Lower on Margin, Sales Concern
BOE Needs New Instruments for Financial Sector, Gieve Tells BBC
Barclays Sees ‘Substantial Reversal’ in 10-Year Notes Next Year
Brown Pledges Further Measures to Get U.K. Banks to Lend
Brown Says Speed of U.K. Recovery Depends on Global Action
U.K. Shopper Count Worsens as Holiday Approaches, Experian Says
Bank of England’s deputy head calls for new tools
# Ireland unveils euro5.5 billion bank bailout


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Re: UK


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(email exchange)

>   On 12/3/08, Kevin wrote:
>   
>   Hi Warren,
>  &#160
>   The UK deficit and debt to GDP is increasing dramatically as the government
>   seeks to stabilize the economy.
>   

Yes, good move on their part. That will restore demand/output/employment.

>   
>   With the UK being a net importer of goods.
>   

Yes.

>   
>   And sterling not benefitting from being a “reserve” or “commodity based
>   price” currency.
>   

Whatever that means with floating FX.

>   
>   What impact does the increased reliance on foreign based capital as a funding
>   source for the government.
>   

The government is not reliant on foreign based capital with it’s currency of issue. It spends first by crediting accounts at its own central bank, the offers those accounts interest bearing alternatives like guilts, etc..

>   
>   have on the price of sterling and gilt yields in the medium term?
>   

The currency could go down relative to other currencies. It’s sure looked way over valued to me for quite a while. Even at one to one with the dollar prices would still be high there.

>   
>   Ask this question as it appears foreign investors are beginning to question
>   whether the UK, with its huge reliance on the financial services industry, very
>   low domestic savings ratio and a consumer that has incurred residential
>   property debt levels dramatically in excess of those in the US, should be
>   compared to Iceland and may suffer similar consequences if there was a
>   dramatic loss of confidence in the UKs economic prospects.
>   

Iceland’s problems are with external currency debt, and with a govt that doesn’t know how to best deal with private sector external currency issues.

>   
>   Many thanks
>   
>   Kevin
>   


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UK budget deficit to the rescue


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The combination of ‘automatic stabilizers’ and proactive fiscal will reverse the downturn in the UK.

Unfortunately they waited too long for the proactive adjustment so they are suffering with the forces that drive the automatic stabilizers-

Falling revenues and rising transfer payments:

U.K. Budget Deficit Widens as Recession Saps Taxes

By Jennifer Ryan

The U.K. budget deficit widened as the gathering recession pounded tax receipts, and analysts warned of worse to come as the economic slump deepens. The 37 bln-pound shortfall ($55 bln) in the first seven months of the fiscal year was the largest since records began in 1993, the Office for National Statistics said in London today. The deficit in October was 1.38 bln pounds, the first shortfall for the month since 1994 and more than triple the 400 million pounds forecast by economists in a Bloomberg News survey.

Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling is planning a package of tax cuts and infrastructure projects to limit the recession, forecast by the Bank of England to extend well into 2009. Tax increases or spending restraint will eventually be needed to bring down the level of borrowing, economists say.

“The likelihood is that the deficit will continue to escalate,” said Philip Shaw, chief economist at Investec Securities in London. “Patching up the public finances is going to be very, very hard work.”

Little more than half way through the fiscal year, the shortfall through October is just short of the 43 bln pounds forecast by Darling in March for the full fiscal year, which ends on March 31, 2009. In the same seven months last year, the deficit was 20.1 bln pounds. Darling will use his annual pre-budget report to Parliament on Nov. 24 to revise his economic forecasts. Economists in a Treasury survey this month predicted the deficit will reach 65 bln pounds this fiscal year and almost 90 bln pounds next year, or 6 % of national income, the most since 1995.


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Brown says fiscal stimulus in UK will be temporary


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Highlights

Brown Says Fiscal Stimulus in U.K. Will Be Temporary

Confirms a lack of understanding of fiscal policy.

Brown sets out anti-recession plan

Gordon Brown on Friday heralded an anti-recession strategy founded on tax cuts for low earners and further cuts in interest rates. People on low incomes had “a higher propensity to spend if their credits are higher”, Mr Brown said, noting that recipients of a wider US fiscal stimulus of $170bn (£113.7bn) approved last February had saved half the money. “In the US, rates have been cut to 1 per cent but the European area has been slower with 3.25 per cent in the euro area and 3 per cent in the UK,” he said in a speech. Mr Brown said he endorsed the views of Mervyn King, BoE governor, that there was scope for further cuts. Mr Brown invoked the memory of John Maynard Keynes, whose plans to reflate the economy in the late 1920s were dismissed by the Treasury chief secretary of the time with three words: “Inflation, extravagance, bankruptcy.”

Brown says fiscal stimulus in UK will be temporary

Prime Minister Gordon Brown said Britain’s financial stimulus package will be “temporary.” Brown’s remark mirrors BOE Governor Mervyn King’s warning that the government must put forward a credible plan to reduce the deficit over time. “In these extraordinary circumstances, it would be perfectly reasonable to see some use of fiscal stimulus, provided two conditions are met,” King said on Nov. 12. “One, that it’s temporary. Secondly, that it would be clear there was a medium-term plan to bring tax and spending into balance.” The U.K. Treasury had a budget gap of 37.6 billion pounds ($57 billion) in the first half of its fiscal year. Since March, Brown’s government delivered tax cuts and spending increases worth 4.8 billion pounds to give relief to low-income earners, delay an increase in fuel duties and to help homeowners with mortgages and stamp-duty taxes.


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UK’s Brown on the pound


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Europeans worry a lot more about inflation from falling currencies than the Fed does.

>   
>   On Wed, Nov 12, 2008 at 7:19 AM, Milo wrote:
>   

  • BOE’s King says he has No Desire for ‘Sharp’ Drop in Pound
  • BoE Signals Rate Cuts Needed as Economy Contracts
  • U.K. Jobless Claims Rise 36,500, Most Since 1992
  • Brown signals imminent tax cuts
  • British retail sales fall for 1st time since 2005
  • U.K. Housing Sales Drop to Record Low as Prices Fall, RICS Says
  • U.K. Banks Pared Mortgages 13% After Rate Cut

BOE’s King Says He Has No Desire for ‘Sharp’ Drop in the Pound

The following are comments by BoE policy makers on inflation, economic growth and interest rates. Governor Mervyn King and colleagues made the remarks at a press conference following the central bank’s inflation report.

“Clearly if sterling falls far enough this will be a concern and it will have an impact on inflation. It’s not surprising that it’s fallen in the past year. We started by going into this with a significant trade deficit. We are seeing a rebalancing of the world economy.”

“That can be a helpful part of rebalancing the economy, provided it doesn’t affect our ability to meet the inflation target. It’s something we keep a very careful eye on. We have no wish to see it fall very sharply.”

“We have to accept that some fall back from the level we saw in 2007 is part of the rebalancing. Central bankers are prepared to worry almost every day, and I’m prepared for that.”

Regarding the current value of the pound, the bank’s Chief Economist Charles Bean said:

“That very considerable stimulus from the exchange rate should help to pull the economy out of its slow period.”


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UK on track


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Brown’s Keynesianism is bankrupt- and will bankrupt us

Almost three months ago, this column described Prime Minister Gordon Brown, and his Chancellor Alistair Darling as “Keynesian”. The last decade of Brownite policy, after all, has featured high public spending, irresponsible borrowing and an ever-growing tax-burden.

by Liam Halligan

Until recently, though, Brown and his entourage have played down their “big government” tendencies – stressing prudence, private enterprise and the joys of lower tax.

But now, with the UK in the grip of the credit crisis New Labour has revealed its true statist colours. “We are spending more to get the economy moving,” said Brown last week. “That’s the right thing to do.”

Agreed.

Well, actually, it isn’t. The last 50 years are riddled with grim episodes of Western governments trying to spend their way out of recession. Every attempt has gone wrong – resulting in spiralling national debts, soaring inflation and a plunging currency.

Those are the financial outcomes, not real outcomes. And the last one was from a failed attempt at a fixed exchange rates- the ERM policy.

In 1976, then Labour Prime Minister Jim Callaghan made a passionate speech to his party conference, telling comrades “in all candour” that the option of reversing a downturn by “deficit-spending” simply “doesn’t exist”.

Callaghan was in a position to know. His Keynesian policies had destabilised the UK economy so seriously we were forced to go cap in hand to the International Monetary Fund.

The UK was forced to the IMF to borrow foreign currency to support the failed fixed exchange rate policy of the firm.

That’s right – the UK’s mid-1970s IMF bail-out, the indisputable nadir of this country’s post-war economic history, was the direct result of Keynesian policy.

No, it was a direct result of the failed ERM policy.

Yet, here we are 22 years on. The young left-wing firebrands who sneered at Callaghan’s brave admission now run the country. To gain power, they had to bury their beliefs, shave off their beards and parrot a faith in free markets.

Since 1997, despite this pretence, New Labour’s “soft Keynesian” concoction of high spending, loose credit controls and more tax has contributed mightily to our current predicament.

Not at all. In fact, tight fiscal have been the rule, and contributed to the current downturn.

But faced with a crisis, and with their backs to the electoral wall, the Brownites are reaching for the intellectual comfort blanket of their youth – the “hard Keynesian” solution of ramping up spending sharply.

Yes, and rightly so. This time with no ERM to trip over.

Because we’re in a crisis, though, Brown’s Keynesian declaration has raised barely any protest. That’s why the letter in today’s Sunday Telegraph is so important – which makes clear Keynesianism is a “misguided and discredited as a tool of economic management”. The economists who signed it cannot be dismissed as parti pris. The economic consensus against Keynesianism is based on evidence, not ideology.

For now, the airwaves are full of economists from investment banks and accounting practices whose firms stand to do quite nicely from a big dollop of extra public infrastructure spending.

These are the type of firms that benefit from the growth and strength of an economy.

Keynesianism? Bring it on, they say.

As should the citizens.

But there are many, many dismal scientists with serious misgivings – but who don’t have “media strategies”, and who perhaps lack the courage to voice their concerns, given that millions of people are frightened about their jobs.

And who doesn’t understand non-convertible currency with floating FX policy.

No one is denying the UK economy is in a bad place. New preliminary data shows the first quarterly output drop for 16 years. Between July and September, GDP fell 0.5 per cent, pushing annual growth down to 0.3 per cent.

Good thing they are looking to spend their way out of it.

As the signatories to our letter make clear, it is “inevitable government expenditure and debt rise in a recession” – as the “automatic stabilisers” kick in, the tax-take falls and benefit spending rises.

Yes, if you don’t do it proactively first.

But Brown’s plan goes way beyond that, posing huge dangers – not least as we’re starting from a position of extreme fiscal weakness.

What difference does that make???

Even last year, when growth was near trend, the Government borrowed £36bn – almost 3 per cent of GDP. And in only the first six months of this financial year, before the slowdown had really begun, we’ve already borrowed £38bn – a colossal 75 per cent up on the same period the year before.

And not nearly enough to support output and employment at the moment more is called for.

Even without Brown’s misty-eyed Keynesian adventure, the public finances are set to deteriorate rapidly. But imagine how bad the numbers will get.

‘Deteriorate’ and ‘bad’ are indicative of his backwards thinking.

as Brown, as he said last week, “brings forward” public spending from future years.

A mistake from Brown to say it that way. Spending is not operationally constrained by revenue. Brown isn’t quite there yet.

That can only lead to much higher taxation,

Maybe, but the same automatic stabilizers usually automatically do that, and usually too much so.

hobbling the private sector and increasing the danger of a drawn-out Japanese-style slump.

Yes, if they raise taxes to cut the deficit like Japan repeatedly did!

Extra Government spending won’t help anyway. Most of it will simply fuel state-sector wage growth – winning Brown a few trade union votes, but boosting wage inflation elsewhere.

‘Wage inflation’ as used here is pathetic. The question is whether demand increases translate into higher sales, output, and employment. If higher wages somehow don’t get spent they don’t contribute to higher output prices.

This is instead a statement against higher wages per se.

The broader macro-economic implications are also alarming. If we keep borrowing, in the end the gilts market will simply dry up.

While possible that they yield could creep up, it’s inaccurate and baseless to predict the market for gilts to dry up.

Japan is a good example, as is Turkey, of two nations at opposite ends of the spectrum, neither constrained by securities sales.

Already, the UK government faces massive age-related liabilities that will undermine our credit-rating over the next few years – before Brown’s final spending spree.

Credit rating is not an issue. UK spending in local currency is operationally not constrained by revenues.

And anyone who tells you inflation isn’t a problem is ignoring that borrowing itself is inflationary,

Huh??? Only spending can be inflationary, particularly if supported by higher costs (including interest rates)

and that the latest bank bail-outs will see the Bank of England printing money on a scale unprecedented in modern times.

The BOE is only exchanging one financial asset for another. It’s ‘printing money’ only if you include some financial assets and not others in the ‘money supply’.

This is the first serious slowdown under Labour – since 1976 – and a moment of acute economic danger. A wounded, desperate Prime Minister is making a final roll of the dice.

Fortunately the right one.

Faced with a desperate electorate, he is reaching for Keynesianism. It serves, also, as a fig-leaf for his previous profligate spending and as a bone to the Labour left.

But it is, indisputably, an immensely dangerous and counter-productive idea. That’s why economists must stand up and be counted.

Yes, especially the ones who support it!

The dismal scientists must speak out.


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IMF Ukraine loan and conditions counterproductive


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UPDATE 3-IMF, Ukraine agree $16.5 bln loan with conditions

By Sabina Zawadzki and Lesley Wroughton

KIEV/WASHINGTON, Oct 26 (Reuters) – The International Monetary Fund and Ukraine said on Sunday they had reached an agreement in principle for a $16.5 billion loan package to ease the effects of the global financial crisis.

But analysts said politicians would have to set aside differences to adopt a set of financial measures needed to clinch the deal and secure the loan.

The IMF statement said nothing about the conditions it sought from Ukraine. But a joint central bank and finance ministry statement said the government would have to draw up a balanced budget and introduce measures to support banks.


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Interview with the BBC


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(email exchange)

Dear David:

Let me refer you to what I call “Mosler’s Law”: There is no financial crisis so deep that a sufficiently large increase in public spending cannot deal with it.

But the European problem is, who can borrow? who can spend?

Solving that problem is the key – the only key – to resolving the crisis.

Regards, James

>   
>   Professor Galbraith,
>   
>   This is David … I’m a BBC Spanish listener. You told that the European
>   Central Bank has not the same solid structure as the banking system in
>   the States. I want to ask you what does Europe has to do to recover
>   from this crisis? Ok, deliver less credits and mortgages maybe, I don’t
>   know, you know it much better than me. But how the recovery will be
>   seen through a decrease in unemployment? what does Spain has to do?
>   
>   Call me David (only 43)
>   Yours sincerely,
>   
>   David …
>   


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UK’s Brown- Right action for wrong reasons


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Brown set to borrow more (FT)

By George Parker and Norma Cohen

Gordon Brown on Monday insisted the government would spend its way through the downturn. Mr Brown said Britain’s debt-to-gross domestic product ratio of 37.6 per cent was lower than main competitors – the eurozone average is 56.4 per cent – and could sustain higher borrowing. “It is because we cut the national debt over the past few years that we are able to do what is the right thing.” The £37.6bn half-year borrowing figure is the highest since the second world war in nominal terms, although relative to the size of the economy it is below that of the 1993/4 fiscal year, when John Major’s Tory government was fighting a recession. Treasury estimates of growth in tax receipts are far short of those forecast at the start of the fiscal year, rising at only 1.9 per cent year-on-year instead of the 5 per cent rate that had been expected.


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UK Daily News Highlights


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Highlights

U.K. Home Prices Drop as Economy Nears `Abyss,’ Rightmove Says
U.K. Mortgage Lending Declines to Lowest Since 2005, CML Says
Economy in recession, says E&Y
Darling to ‘reprioritise’ spending
U.K. Deposit Fund Pays 3 Billion Pounds for ING Iceland Savers

 
Very constructive move here- front loading future public sector capital expenditures.

Darling to ‘reprioritise’ spending (FT)

Alistair Darling evoked the spirit of John Maynard Keynes on Sunday as he signalled a “reprioritising” of spending plans towards capital infrastructure, housing and energy. The chancellor of the exchequer will call on departments to bring forward billions of pounds of capital expenditure to invigorate the economy ahead of an expected recession. The government is limited in its ability to step up overall spending for the current three-year period, set at the last comprehensive spending review. But it can bring forward money from planned budgets in 2010-11 – after the next general election. The government has already announced the front-loading of money to build more social housing as part of its autumn relaunch. It has also allowed the Ministry of Defence to sign off its £4bn aircraft carrier contracts by juggling its budget.


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