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Previously on "The £squillion public banking bail out ?"
Show me a bank or building society that is advertising a negative interest rate.
(I expect you might mean relative to inflation. Well tough, what law of the universe states that you're entitled to make money on your savings?)
I never said negative interest rate. I didn't cover savers entitlement to make money on savings because that's not directly relevant to the observation that we are still bailing out the banks. Or rather that savers and house buyers are.
Given the current stat d'affaire (excuse my rubbish french), I'm surprised & maybe a bit frustrated the answer to this pretty goddamn fundamental question is so elusive.
Well I’d have thought it was an easy question too, but apparently we are now entering a phase of quantum economics in which money can be both real and fake, both lent and given, all at the same time. A bit like a photon, but more expensive.
Given the current stat d'affaire (excuse my rubbish french), I'm surprised & maybe a bit frustrated the answer to this pretty goddamn fundamental question is so elusive.
We're still bailing out the banks and will do for some time. Or at least some of us are. Savers are earning negative interest and house prices are being kept artificially high to prevent mortgage defaults, which would hurt the banks.
I have been meaning to ask this as my impression was that the majority of this was made available to the banks if they got in trouble but little was used.
The only cost has really been buying the banks ( 70 billion I think ) at a very cheap price which they will make back easily.
Oh, so the really smart bankers will now go and get themselves into trouble so they can have an easy life taking public money?
I have been meaning to ask this as my impression was that the majority of this was made available to the banks as a loan if they got in trouble but little was used.
The only cost has really been buying the banks ( 70 billion I think ) at a very cheap price which they will make back easily.
Okey dokey then, some help from you lot please ...
The £squillion public banking bail out ... ?
Was all this money "given" to the banks or was it a public loan ? I was under the apprehension it was the latter.
Again if the latter, even with a modest interest rate attached, the public finances can at some moment in time expect quite a welcome boost in repayments. Certainly enough to make one hell of a difference to the structural deficit.
Why do we never hear about this side of the equation from our political friends & foes ? Unless of course I'm under a mis-apprehension.
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