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THE United Kingdom Economics Thread (merged)

Discussions about the economic and financial ramifications of PEAK OIL

Re: Britain on the brink of an economic depression, say expe

Unread postby mefistofeles » Sun 25 Jan 2009, 03:39:33

At least here in the US I think is far worse than most people imagine: that the economy was just giant ponzi scheme.

Minsky Ponzi Finance .pdf

I guess Minsky's theory was that we would go from Hedging,to Speculative to Ponzi Finance.

With hedging your income covers the finance expense and principal, think of a credit card customer that promptly pays off his interest and principle every month.

Speculative finance would be the credit card customer who pays off his interest but needs to roll over the principle.

Then we get to Ponzi finance, where the customer in question can't even service his interest payments. In other words he is dependent upon the underlying asset that he goes going up in value. i.e. the Refi boom in the US where people pulled money out of their homes, just to cover his interest. If the underlying asset even stabilizes in value he is toast.

Also alot of the "innovations" from the 80-90's were too easily abused, with securitization lenders can now dump their risk onto someone else and have far fewer incentives to do good underwriting.

With less lender involvement loans went from lenders,who actually understood what was being underwritten,to bond holders and credit ratings agencies that didn't understand very much.

In other words risk was transferred from those best able to understand it to those least able to understand it.

Also lets think about the average 30 year fixed rate mortgage, its a crazy product for anyone to underwrite because you have to use variable rate borrowing to finance a fixed rate asset. In other words most bond holders don't want to hold bonds for 30 years so you end up financing your mortgages with bonds that could mature in less time, five or less years.

At the end of the five year period you have to roll over your bonds and refinance the asset. The problem occurs if your asset is paying less than what the market is charging for finance.

In fact Princeton's Economics Department did a great presentation on the financial crisis . In it something like 75% of all borrowing is done under a year. So therefore its very easy to be caught in an interest rate squeeze if the financing costs change.

Of course the most damning thing is that this collapse was predicted by the government itself. In 2003 OFHEO did a systematic risk .pdf , the man who was in charge of the paper "resigned" a week after its publication due to pressure from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

As time progressed even Fannie and Freddie began to realize that the situation had the potential to deteriorate and in 2005 Fannie S V-P of Risk Polich did an interesting .pdf presentation on whether or not there was a risk of a major pricing collapse. He implied that it was quite likely.

Anyone with a shred of sense knew that this collapse was coming and the exclamations of surprise and shock are in retrospect are comical.
Last edited by mefistofeles on Sun 25 Jan 2009, 03:50:28, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Britain on the brink of an economic depression, say expe

Unread postby ReverseEngineer » Sun 25 Jan 2009, 03:44:40

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jdmartin', '
')I've never been much of a conspiracy theorist, but a discussion on another forum I'm a part of has convinced me that there is a goal among TPTB - to create a permanent world ruling class that cuts across geographic boundaries. This is why everyone gets pissed when rogue nations full of people that don't give two shits about flat screen tvs don't play by the rules of the game, and so we go bomb them back into the stone age. It's hard to create a permanent slave class if they won't subscribe to your method of chains - in this case, tied to the almighty buck.


Its even more difficult to create and maintain a permanent slave class when you don't have a functioning monetary system with which to do it. The most recent spin we got was the problem here is Americans aren't spending enough money. Neglecting for a moment the difficulty of spending money you don't have because you lost your job, I think people are starting to get the clue that their job might be the next one to go, and even J6P isn't going to buy a new car on credit he can't get if he thinks he might run out of beer money.

I don't make 6 figures, but once I stopped consuming every damn product thrown in my face I became quite "rich", relatively speaking of course. It irked me so much that Holloywood actors were paid in the millions while teachers were paid in the thousands I simply stopped going to movies. I still see them occassionally because other friends are not so psycho as I am and they buy the DVDs when they come out. I don't have a television and don't pay for Cable as a result. The one thing I do buy into is telephone service and the internet, which comes to you pretty cheap because all those folks putting up ads on the websites pay for most of it, and I don't even SEE the ads anymore, I adjusted my eyes to skip right over them.

What you have here by NECESSITY is everyone doing this at the same time. People are forgoing the trips to the fast food joint in favor of cheaper food they can prepare themselves at home, forgoing the Starbucks Lattes inf avor of home brewed coffee, forgoing purchases of new cars in favor of the vast number of used ones out on the market and listening to the radio (still free for the most part) instead of buying every CD or iTune Download. When people stop buying, the Pigmen go NUTS. Out of the sky they fall in the thunderstorm. The money sieve stops working.

The real challenge here is how you set up a society where people do not consume non-stop, since it doesn't make a profit greed isn't a good motivator. It needs a spiritual underpinning of some sort, and that is what we don't have, or rather it was squashed out by the consumer culture. The religions we do have became perverted beyond belief, just look at Joel Ostein's "God Wants me to be Rich" books. Its ludicrous beyond belief, but still people are buying this stuff in some measure.

Regardless of how things play out further, I think what we are witnessing here is a sea change in the social mindset. I cannot see how people will ever view conspicuous consumption again as a positive value for society. The consequences are clearly obvious, a degraded earth and vast inequities in the distribution of wealth as a result. The time has come where people can by necessity only take as much as they need from the earth, and no more. The time has come where Pigmen can no longer make a profit off the individual greed of each human being. The time has come for the Meek to Inherit the Earth.

Sadly, the inheritance is a horrifically degraded earth, and many more Meek will go to the Great Beyond than remain to rebuild on it, but of course you can't make an Omellette without Breaking a few Eggs. :-) So it goes.

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Re: Britain on the brink of an economic depression, say expe

Unread postby americandream » Sun 25 Jan 2009, 05:45:24

Capitalism (not modernity I might add) is destined to collapse, very painfully, very messily. Anyone who believes otherwise, I suggest they consider a finitely resourced world dedicated to infinite growth.....the dynamics of the two where the limits to that fantasy are reached.

Britain.....this present fiasco...is a taste of whats to come. Whats even more remarkable is that as this saga unfolds, the cries for more of the malady....unfettered transformation and marketing of these limited natural resources...grows even louder.

This disconnect is why we got here and will remain entrapped until the grisly end.
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Re: Britain on the brink of an economic depression, say expe

Unread postby EnergyUnlimited » Sun 25 Jan 2009, 06:41:31

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mefistofeles', '
')Anyone with a shred of sense knew that this collapse was coming and the exclamations of surprise and shock are in retrospect are comical.

You are correct.

While I was observing society during last 15 years, it was certain to me that the system is heading towards collapse.

1. I was observing increasing proportion of population abandoning any useful activities and joining various useless paper shuffling industries.

2. I was observing, particularly in Britain, promotion of consumer spending as a means of maintaining "growth".

3. I was observing emergence of useless human rights & entitlement culture.

4. I was observing increasingly reckless attitude towards credit facilities.

5. I was observing manufacturing based economy being replaced by finance.

6. I was observing overgrowth of management structures. In some organizations there was comparable numbers of managers and manages.

7. I was observing useless growth of unnecessary government departments on national and local level.

8. I was observing cowardly safety first instead of duty first attitude taking hold in Western societies.

9. I was observing dogmatic, politically correct culture replacing intellectual discussion and democratic process.

10. I was observing collapse of individual responsibility for one's action. Whatever bad have happened, there was always someone to blame (or sue...).

And now I observe all that crap & liberal idiocy going right to hell, where it belongs.
Very good.
Long live collapse!
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Re: Britain on the brink of an economic depression, say expe

Unread postby ReverseEngineer » Sun 25 Jan 2009, 07:03:07

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('EnergyUnlimited', 'A')nd now I observe all that crap & liberal idiocy going right to hell, where it belongs.
Very good.
Long live collapse!


Liberal Idiocy? George Bush is a Liberal? Deregulation of the banking industry is a liberal concept? What?

I fail to see how "liberals" caused this, rather it is quite obvious the perpetual greed of free marketeers who threw all caution to the wind and blew up financial bubbles to enrich themselves are the real culprits here. Fortunately for us all, these folks are now offing themselves at a rapid pace, and those that don't will face the Guillotine in short order. Social Misanthropes like this are Zombies, Dead men walking.

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Re: Britain on the brink of an economic depression, say expe

Unread postby EnergyUnlimited » Sun 25 Jan 2009, 07:15:04

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ReverseEngineer', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('EnergyUnlimited', 'A')nd now I observe all that crap & liberal idiocy going right to hell, where it belongs.
Very good.
Long live collapse!


Liberal Idiocy? George Bush is a Liberal? Deregulation of the banking industry is a liberal concept? What?

I fail to see how "liberals" caused this, rather it is quite obvious the perpetual greed of free marketeers who threw all caution to the wind and blew up financial bubbles to enrich themselves are the real culprits here. Fortunately for us all, these folks are now offing themselves at a rapid pace, and those that don't will face the Guillotine in short order. Social Misanthropes like this are Zombies, Dead men walking.

Reverse Engineer

Examples of "crap" are: 1, 2, 4, 5, 6 in my post above.
Theses can be traced to increasingly defunct capitalist system.

Examples of "liberal idiocy" are: 3, 7, 8, 9, 10.
These can be traced to defunct liberal values.

All these factors (1-10) are contributing to unfolding ruin of the system.
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Re: Britain on the brink of an economic depression, say expe

Unread postby ReverseEngineer » Sun 25 Jan 2009, 07:47:15

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('EnergyUnlimited', 'E')xamples of "liberal idiocy" are: 3, 7, 8, 9, 10.
These can be traced to defunct liberal values.


Well let's look at these points then

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '3'). I was observing emergence of useless human rights & entitlement culture.


So you would consider Gitmo a move toward useless human rights and entitelement?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '4'). I was observing increasingly reckless attitude towards credit facilities.


HTF is this one "liberal"? Its the Banksters who lent the money, they are hardly liberal as a group.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '7'). I was observing useless growth of unnecessary government departments on national and local level.


Yup, no doubt, the SEC grew so well they were able to keep the Banksters in check here.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '8'). I was observing cowardly safety first instead of duty first attitude taking hold in Western societies.

You are talking I guess about the safety net that was eviscerated under the Bush Administration?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '9'). I was observing dogmatic, politically correct culture replacing intellectual discussion and democratic process.

Far as I could tell over the last decade, the "dogmatically politically correct" discussion came off of right wing shills on Fox News and out of the mouth of Rush Limbaugh. Its precisely because this has been the dogma we are i such deep trouble, and the LAST thing Rush Limbaugh is could be called "Liberal"

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '1')0. I was observing collapse of individual responsibility for one's action. Whatever bad have happened, there was always someone to blame (or sue...).

Let me ask you, just WHO is it here that is not taking responsibility for losing trillions of dollars? BANKSTERS! Good conservative republican CROOKS! All the Welfare Moms in the world could not have lost so much as this or abrogated their responsibility for it.

CASE CLOSED. Every point you make points to the Conservatives, not the Liberals here as most at fault. Loser ideology on all counts.

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Re: Britain on the brink of an economic depression, say expe

Unread postby americandream » Sun 25 Jan 2009, 07:58:01

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('EnergyUnlimited', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ReverseEngineer', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('EnergyUnlimited', 'A')nd now I observe all that crap & liberal idiocy going right to hell, where it belongs.
Very good.
Long live collapse!


Liberal Idiocy? George Bush is a Liberal? Deregulation of the banking industry is a liberal concept? What?

I fail to see how "liberals" caused this, rather it is quite obvious the perpetual greed of free marketeers who threw all caution to the wind and blew up financial bubbles to enrich themselves are the real culprits here. Fortunately for us all, these folks are now offing themselves at a rapid pace, and those that don't will face the Guillotine in short order. Social Misanthropes like this are Zombies, Dead men walking.

Reverse Engineer

Examples of "crap" are: 1, 2, 4, 5, 6 in my post above.
Theses can be traced to increasingly defunct capitalist system.

Examples of "liberal idiocy" are: 3, 7, 8, 9, 10.
These can be traced to defunct liberal values.

All these factors (1-10) are contributing to unfolding ruin of the system.


The inevitable terminal failure of capitalism has nothing to do with defunct liberal values (whatever you may deem them to be), the onset of weakened western male libidos or any other fevered speculation you may conjure up to calm your evident lack of reasoned observation.

It has to do, entirely, with the fact that devoting a planet wide civilisation of 2 billion and rising by the day, to the pursuit exclusively of trading and the consumption of plastic pumpkins and the maximisation of personal profit thereof, must, as a matter of fact, fail in the face of resourcing failure, a risk which draws perilously close each day with the spread of the fantasy of endless growth to all corners of this globe.

There are no conspiratorial or otherwise exotically conservative causes of the imminent collapse other than the rather simple one that we are reaching the end of our feedstock (commonwealth) for the transformation of labour surplus into wildly fabulous private gain....marxism 101.

edit: the spread of cornucopia has as yet to mature across the 6 billion, is at 2 billion but in my view, is likely to grow given the evident Chinese addiction to plastic pumpkin growth in excess of 10% and western encouragement of this new found Chinese addiction.
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Re: Britain on the brink of an economic depression, say expe

Unread postby dorlomin » Sun 25 Jan 2009, 08:22:44

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Sixstrings', 'A')nyway, back on track..

I think I made a valid observation. In the US it's all being blamed on sub-prime. The UK had no sub-prime issue, yet they're in the same boat. I found that interesting.

If I were to look into this further (which I have no reason to), I could use that comparative data to make a case that it is NOT the poor Black folks who didn't pay their bills fault.

This is an issue that matters, as there are those in the American press slyly slipping that thought by, that it's all the fault of the poor who should never have gotten mortgages in the first place. Well if that were so, then the UK wouldn't be in a mess.
The US has a housing crisis and not just a subprime one, the subprime was only the first part to get hit. The UK also is experiancing a huge crash in house prices but nothing on the scale of what is happening in the US bubble states. The key difference is that in the UK there is insufficient housing for demand and very little new land is being made available to build houses on, that and you owe the debt on your house even after it has been repossesed: no jingle mail in the UK. These two factors mean that the UKs housing sector is not likely to crash as hard as the US's. Both economies are suffering from the sudden withdrawal of available credit meant the economy did not have sufficient time to adjust which is a large part of what is making the problem worse.

The big market that is causing the most harm in the UK is the buy to let market where people borrowed money to buy houses to rent them out. (Twilight is the exper on this topic). Several bit part players in the UK banking game (Bradford and Bigley, Northern Rock etc) where heavily involved in this sector but funded there activities using short term comercial debt. When the world developed a sudden case of fear of lending to each other these banks suddenly found they were not able to keep turning over the debts and were at risk of running out of money. As these institutions stopped lending the amount of money available the boomin in the housing market dried up. People found it much more difficult to obtain credit for a housing loan so the price was bound to take a fall. Other leanders like RBS, Barclays and so on were takign huge losses due to there investment banking arms so had to hoard cash anyway but seeing that the market was turning they stopped lending. The housing market has fallen by about 17% in London, the current figure is c. 8% pa for last year nationaly.

The other side of the story, the collapse of investment banking worldwide is well known and needs little repetition here. The UK was a very major player in that sector.

The UK and US are in broadly comparable situations but with a couple of important differences. UK housing is likely to fall less than US housing and its is likely to lead to proportionaly smaller losses for reasons given above. But the UK currency is too small to defend itself and is not currently being bought in huge quantities by international investors and institutions to prop up balance sheets, unlike the euro and the dollar. The pound has fallen quite heavily against these currencies and is liable to volatile trade which is manna from heaven for hedges and currency dealers. The ERM debacle has proven they are able to manipulate markets to profit from the pound so it is liable to exentuate the weakness in the UK economy by one of the key indicators, the currency, appearing weaker than it is.

The weakness of the pound has one huge advantage for the UK. Although it is popularly believed the UK has no manufacturing it does have a large manufacturing sector, just that the sector is nowhere near as large as it should be for an economy of this size. This sector is quite likely to benefit tremendously from the weaker pound. Nissan, Toyota, Honda, Ford and GM all have major factories in the UK. With a weak pound these big producers are likely to lead the UK out of recession. It also has the most 'flexible' employment laws in the EU, so has always been very attractive for smaller firms to invest in compaired to other old European countries. As the world recovers from this recession the UKs manufacturing sector is liable to grow as a % of the GDP. In two or three years the UK will be a fair bit poorer but with a much better shaped economy, this is with one major caveat, that the banks have revealed more than half of there losses....... if there are still very significant losses to come then it could be goodnight vienna.
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Re: Britain on the brink of an economic depression, say expe

Unread postby Typo » Sun 25 Jan 2009, 12:17:08

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ReverseEngineer', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Sixstrings', '
')Sounds like all this would have happened anyway then, even without sub-prime mortgages. Larger forces at work here, methinks.


You are just getting this? I've been hammering down on this for months! Do you just ignore what I write? You gotta read it in the MSM for it to sink in? What?

Reverse Engineer

Wow . . . what a jackass.
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Re: Britain on the brink of an economic depression, say expe

Unread postby EnergyUnlimited » Sun 25 Jan 2009, 12:45:58

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ReverseEngineer', '
')Well let's look at these points then

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '3'). I was observing emergence of useless human rights & entitlement culture.


So you would consider Gitmo a move toward useless human rights and entitelement?

I am talking about entitlement culture which prevents many from relying on their own initiative and turning to state for support instead.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '4'). I was observing increasingly reckless attitude towards credit facilities.


HTF is this one "liberal"? Its the Banksters who lent the money, they are hardly liberal as a group.

Irrelevant.
Read my previous post again.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '7'). I was observing useless growth of unnecessary government departments on national and local level.

Yup, no doubt, the SEC grew so well they were able to keep the Banksters in check here.
I am talking about excessive red tape which is driving manufacturing jobs abroad.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '8'). I was observing cowardly safety first instead of duty first attitude taking hold in Western societies.

You are talking I guess about the safety net that was eviscerated under the Bush Administration?
I am talking about finding all possible excuses not to carry on certain tasks, what is driving many jobs abroad and also increasing insurance premiums to beyond reasonable levels.

Banning children from picking conkers on playground in British schools for safety reasons is another example.
National idiot factories, I suppose.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '9'). I was observing dogmatic, politically correct culture replacing intellectual discussion and democratic process.

Far as I could tell over the last decade, the "dogmatically politically correct" discussion came off of right wing shills on Fox News and out of the mouth of Rush Limbaugh. Its precisely because this has been the dogma we are i such deep trouble, and the LAST thing Rush Limbaugh is could be called "Liberal"
Politically correct culture is a futile attempt attempt to make all peoples equal even if they are not.
Silly equal opportunity policies where gender or race are trumping actual skills in job candidate selection etc.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '1')0. I was observing collapse of individual responsibility for one's action. Whatever bad have happened, there was always someone to blame (or sue...).

Let me ask you, just WHO is it here that is not taking responsibility for losing trillions of dollars? BANKSTERS! Good conservative republican CROOKS! All the Welfare Moms in the world could not have lost so much as this or abrogated their responsibility for it.
Welfare moms, credit addicted morons, and peoples suing local authorities for breaking leg on the pavement are all necessary to produce mindless and decadent society which we are living in.
There is nothing strange that someone will try to milk it.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '[')b]CASE CLOSED. Every point you make points to the Conservatives, not the Liberals here as most at fault. Loser ideology on all counts.
I am not convinced by your argumentation above.
You have failed to produce convincing arguments.
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Re: Britain on the brink of an economic depression, say expe

Unread postby Novus » Sun 25 Jan 2009, 15:42:54

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ReverseEngineer', '
')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '3'). I was observing emergence of useless human rights & entitlement culture.


So you would consider Gitmo a move toward useless human rights and entitlement?

Reverse Engineer


I don't think he is talking about Gitmo in the sense of the "Useless" human hights and entitlement. I can't speak for EnergyUnlimited but I have witnessed entitlement culture many times. A dozen or so years ago it just hit me as something just so WRONG. Back then there was paint factory in town that had been there for 50 years dating back to WWII. Next to the factory was a piece of vacant land that the town decided to build a school on. When the school opened the factory found itself in violation of a town ordinance that banned industry from school zones and the factory had to close. This was done under the guise that our children had "special" human rights and were entitled to an education free from industrial activity. It is such phony baloney non-sense like this is why our civilization is coming to an end.
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Re: Britain on the brink of an economic depression, say expe

Unread postby section451 » Sun 25 Jan 2009, 15:56:02

Lets also not forget that the UK has one of the highest personal debts per capita in the whole of Europe, which in November 08 stood at £1.456 Billion. Even 2 years ago, this was twice that of the rest of Europe.

People have been using their 'paper wealth' generated by rising housing prices to borrow more against their properties whilst wages or income have not kept pace with the cost of living, which is relatively expensive here in western Europe.

Couple with this the lax employment laws here mean that large numbers of people are employed for low wages in service economies, manufacturing whislt being decimated in the 1980's does exist, however 'invisibles' now account for the largest proportion of UK exports.

There's also a 'sub prime' element in lending here where people of low income were encouraged to jump on the 'property wealth' bandwagon, albeit not as bad as the US due to tighter regulation.

IMHO people in the UK, like Iceland have been spending money for years that they didn't have and are now experiencing payback time - not a good country to be in.
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Re: Britain on the brink of an economic depression, say expe

Unread postby davep » Sun 25 Jan 2009, 16:05:57

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('section451', 'L')ets also not forget that the UK has one of the highest personal debts per capita in the whole of Europe, which in November 08 stood at £1.456 Billion. Even 2 years ago, this was twice that of the rest of Europe.

People have been using their 'paper wealth' generated by rising housing prices to borrow more against their properties whilst wages or income have not kept pace with the cost of living, which is relatively expensive here in western Europe.

Couple with this the lax employment laws here mean that large numbers of people are employed for low wages in service economies, manufacturing whislt being decimated in the 1980's does exist, however 'invisibles' now account for the largest proportion of UK exports.

There's also a 'sub prime' element in lending here where people of low income were encouraged to jump on the 'property wealth' bandwagon, albeit not as bad as the US due to tighter regulation.

IMHO people in the UK, like Iceland have been spending money for years that they didn't have and are now experiencing payback time - not a good country to be in.


I am just happy that I got out when I did (2006). I bought a house in 1999 with a 105% mortgage, and ended up leaving and paying off all my debts (over 40k beyond the mortgage), with a six-figure sum left over.

I was lucky, but also able to see that this was going to end badly. I can thank people on this site for helping me in my decision.
What we think, we become.
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Re: Britain on the brink of an economic depression, say expe

Unread postby Nickel » Mon 26 Jan 2009, 09:28:07

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ReverseEngineer', 'W')ell let's look at these points then


Yeah, but remember who you're talking to here. :)


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ReverseEngineer', 'S')o you would consider Gitmo a move toward useless human rights and entitelement?


He meant: not enough summary executions!


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ReverseEngineer', 'H')TF is this one "liberal"? Its the Banksters who lent the money, they are hardly liberal as a group.


He meant: the bankers were overly liberal (eh? eh? see?) in their lending... bad, like all things liberal!


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ReverseEngineer', 'Y')up, no doubt, the SEC grew so well they were able to keep the Banksters in check here.


He meant: instead of spending money on safety, it should have been spent on duty -- in this case, they should have have sent in the army to shoot white collar criminals!


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ReverseEngineer', 'Y')ou are talking I guess about the safety net that was eviscerated under the Bush Administration?

He meant: the SEC. Or maybe you do... :o


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ReverseEngineer', 'F')ar as I could tell over the last decade, the "dogmatically politically correct" discussion came off of right wing shills on Fox News and out of the mouth of Rush Limbaugh. Its precisely because this has been the dogma we are i such deep trouble, and the LAST thing Rush Limbaugh is could be called "Liberal"

He meant: no, you're being deliberately obtuse! When right wingers lay it out, no discussion, no compromise, that's democracy. When left-wingers work it out and find consensus, that's dogmatism. Get it "right"!


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ReverseEngineer', '1')0. I was observing collapse of individual responsibility for one's action. Whatever bad have happened, there was always someone to blame (or sue...).

He meant: people should be allowed to starve if they make mistakes or die in the gutter if they won't find a $50,000 a year job with health benefits. But of course, Bush and Cheney should never wind up in The Hague for having started two wars of aggression. The needless deaths of hundreds of thousands of non-combatants is not a matter of "individual responsibility". Only things involving small green pieces of paper are.
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Re: Britain on the brink of an economic depression, say expe

Unread postby pedalling_faster » Mon 26 Jan 2009, 09:52:56

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Sixstrings', 'I') think I made a valid observation. In the US it's all being blamed on sub-prime. The UK had no sub-prime issue, yet they're in the same boat.


you're saying that when those slick hedge fund managers came peddling their MBS', CDO's, and other SIV's, the Brit's all said "no, thanks. now, would you like sugar with your tea ?" - and THEN built THEIR bubble using an entirely different set of bricks ?
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Re: Britain on the brink of an economic depression, say expe

Unread postby eXpat » Mon 26 Jan 2009, 09:55:24

The clouds in the horizon are getting darker and darker:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he slide in sterling has turned "disorderly".
We can argue over whether or not the first phase of devaluation acted as a shock-absorber for a badly mismanaged economy, providing a cushion against debt deflation and the housing crash. But the latest dive has a very malign feel.
For the first time since this crisis began eighteen months ago, I am seriously worried that British government is losing control.
The currency has fallen five cents today to $1.39 against the dollar. It is now perched precariously on a two-decade support line -- the levels tested in 2001 and 1992. If it breaks that line, traders may send it crashing down towards dollar parity.
The danger is blindingly obvious. The $4.4 trillion of foreign liabilities accumulated by UK banks are twice the size of the British economy. UK foreign reserves are virtually nothing at $60.6bn. (on this, more later in a piece I'm writing today)
f the Government is forced to nationalise RBS and perhaps Barclays with their vast exposure in dollars, euros, and yen, it risks being submerged. It is one thing for a sovereign state to let its national debt jump in a crisis -- or a war -- perhaps even to 100pc of GDP. It is another to take on foreign debts on such a scale with no reserves. Yes, the banks have foreign assets as well to match the debts. But how much are these assets really worth?
...
We cannot even do what Iceland did to save its skin. Reykjavik refused to honour the foreign debts of its buccaneering banks. It let them default, parking the losses in Resolution Committees. Small islands can do that. Iceland has fish instead, and lots of metals.
Britain cannot follow suit. The debts are too big. If London takes such disastrous action it will set off global panic and lead to an asset death spiral, drawing the entire world into deep depression.
...
England has not defaulted since the Middle Ages. There is a real risk it may do so now.

And no -- just so there is no misuderstanding -- it would not have been any better if Britain had joined the euro ten years ago. The bubble would have been just as bad, or worse, as Ireland and Spain can attest. We have our disaster. They have their disaster. When the dust has settled in five years we can make a proper judgement on the sterling-EMU issue. Not now.

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If you are in Britain, is time to hit the supermarket, and go to the canned food section, it may not be this week, it may not even be this month, but it will come and it will be ugly.
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Re: Britain on the brink of an economic depression, say experts

Unread postby eXpat » Fri 20 Feb 2009, 20:12:44

Britain: heading for disastrous depression?
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')"To believe the noise, we are already in a 1930s-style deflation," said Jeremy Warner in The Independent. But it isn't upon us yet. Inflation is proving stickier than expected. The Retail Price Index, which includes mortgage payments, is weakening fast, falling to an annual rate of 0.1%, the lowest rate since 1960. But consumer price inflation (CPI) merely edged lower to 3%, from 3.1% the month before. And the core rate, excluding food and energy, ticked up to 1.3%. Food prices are still up 11% year-on-year, and it seems that retailers didn't discount as heavily as usual in January, or reversed some previous price cuts, given the deep cuts in December. The cost of games, toys and furniture did not ease as expected, noted Ashley Seager in The Guardian.


http://www.moneyweek.com/news-and-charts/economics/britain-heading-for-disastrous-depression-42302.aspx
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Re: Britain on the brink of an economic depression, say experts

Unread postby MisterB » Fri 20 Feb 2009, 20:41:47

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')f you are in Britain, is time to hit the supermarket, and go to the canned food section, it may not be this week, it may not even be this month, but it will come and it will be ugly.


If you had no debts/no savings do people think it wiser to stick with that situation or use some credit while available to purchase a few supplies.
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Re: Britain on the brink of an economic depression, say experts

Unread postby eXpat » Fri 20 Feb 2009, 21:23:21

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MisterB', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')f you are in Britain, is time to hit the supermarket, and go to the canned food section, it may not be this week, it may not even be this month, but it will come and it will be ugly.


If you had no debts/no savings do people think it wiser to stick with that situation or use some credit while available to purchase a few supplies.

By all means, get supplies. Personal bankruptcies are going to hit records day after day, so will possibly banks bankrupt in cascade or will be nationalized. If they start to prosecute everybody that doesn´t pay his/her loans, you may as well consider all Britain a prison.
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