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Previously on "UK doomed by size of debts thread.."

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  • AlfredJPruffock
    replied
    Originally posted by Pondlife View Post
    Xog, Your poem doesn't rhyme and it's not split in to verses.

    Sort it out will you.
    Please - if I may be so bold ...allow me -


    A Ring a Ring of Labour Roses
    A Pocket Full of Socialist Posers
    Atishoo - Atishoo !!!

    We all Fall Down !!!

    Leave a comment:


  • Pondlife
    replied
    Xog, Your poem doesn't rhyme and it's not split in to verses.

    Sort it out will you.

    Leave a comment:


  • xoggoth
    replied
    That thing Timberwolf linked to has been on several news sites for quite a while. Well worth a read.

    Britain’s fiscal and economic problems
    result from grotesque mishandling
    of the economy under the 1997-
    2010 Labour administration. Gordon
    Brown’s reform of the financial
    regulatory system, and his insistence
    that the Bank of England determine
    monetary policy on the basis of retail
    inflation alone, resulted in a reckless
    escalation in mortgage lending.
    The ensuing property price boom
    spurred unsustainable growth in a
    plethora of housing-related sectors,
    and underwrote a rapid expansion
    in consumer borrowing. Believing
    that this bubble was real growth,
    Brown spent up to, and beyond, the
    apparent expansion in the tax base
    that had resulted from the propertydriven
    boom. Real public spending
    increased by 53% in a period in which
    the economy expanded by just 17%.
    As soon as the bubble burst, a chasm
    rapidly opened up between excessive
    spending and falling tax revenues.
    In addition to skewing the economy
    towards debt and public spending,
    Brown and his colleagues imposed
    ever-increasing regulatory and
    fiscal burdens on business, and
    simultaneously transferred resources
    from private industry into a public
    sector whose productivity was subject
    to continuous decline. This weakened
    the overall productivity of the
    British economy.
    Labour’s period in office was
    characterised not just by economic
    and fiscal mismanagement but also
    by the promotion of a culture of moral
    absolutism centred around spurious
    and selective concepts of ‘fairness’.
    This culture, and the accompanying
    sense of individual and collective
    entitlement, is the biggest obstacle in
    the way of effective economic reform.

    Leave a comment:


  • sasguru
    replied
    Originally posted by DodgyAgent View Post
    Your mind works in binary only. .
    Definitely low level IT support
    His school reports were right, I'm guessing the word "Average" figured hugely.

    Leave a comment:


  • BrilloPad
    replied
    10.39am: Germany's debt auction has also just concluded --- and the breaking news is that it has sold just over €4bn of the €5bn of 10-year Bunds on offer.

    The Bundesbank reported that it sold €4.057 of 10-year Bunds. The yield (or interest rate) on the debt fell slightly to 1.93%, from 1.98%, but this is the second auction in a row where the German Finance Agency has been forced to retain some debt.

    We'd flagged up at 9.58am that there was a risk that the auction might not be fully subscribed (David Schnautz of Commerzbank called the results very accurately).

    The result certainly isn't a disaster, and it would be wrong to suggest that 'the markets' suddenly don't trust German debt. Looking at the table of results -- Germany actually received more than €5bn of bids, but presumably some of the bids were unacceptably low.

    10.36am: Here come the auction results -- with the British debt sale going smoothly.

    The UK Debt Management Agency just reported that it sold its £3.75bn of five-year gilts at an average yield, or interest rate, of 1.106%. That's a drop from 1.143% at the last auction of this kind.

    ============================
    Eurozone crisis:
    ============================
    Looks like sterling is doing quite well.

    Leave a comment:


  • DodgyAgent
    replied
    Originally posted by BlasterBates View Post
    Maybe this might give you a clue:

    Total Debt to GDP (%) | Global Finance

    Which compares debt levels between the UK and Euro zone countries, also for financial institutions.

    Have a nice day.
    You dont do perspective do you? Your mind works in binary only. Its right or its wrong debt is good or it is bad, banks are in debt -bad. No inkling that maybe the type of debt or when the debt is due really comes into your sort of equation. The same with global warming - it is or it isnt good or bad etc etc.

    Leave a comment:


  • sasguru
    replied
    Originally posted by DodgyAgent View Post
    So what?
    That might as well be the signature to all BB's posts.

    I reckon he's low-level IT support.
    Whcih means I get to keep my large house and he gets to keep hid hand-to-mouth existence in his bedsit in Euroland.

    Leave a comment:


  • darmstadt
    replied
    Originally posted by AtW View Post
    I confirm that I saw this bet proposal.

    Now if only BlasterBates confirms he works in intellectually demanding occupation he could be moving into new bedsit over a kebab shop next to Wandsworth HMP.
    No, shed at the bottom of DA's garden...

    Leave a comment:


  • DodgyAgent
    replied
    Originally posted by BlasterBates View Post
    Maybe this might give you a clue:

    Total Debt to GDP (%) | Global Finance

    Which compares debt levels between the UK and Euro zone countries, also for financial institutions.

    Have a nice day.
    So what?

    Leave a comment:


  • BlasterBates
    replied
    Originally posted by sasguru View Post
    British banks are more insolvent that Euroland banks?
    Maybe this might give you a clue:

    Total Debt to GDP (%) | Global Finance

    Which compares debt levels between the UK and Euro zone countries, also for financial institutions.

    Have a nice day.

    Leave a comment:


  • AtW
    replied
    Originally posted by sasguru View Post
    British banks are more insolvent that Euroland banks?
    Dunno, do they even have casino banks in euroland?

    Leave a comment:


  • sasguru
    replied
    Originally posted by BlasterBates View Post
    I suppose it's difficult to see the relevance of the atricle if you're as thick as pigsh*t, but I'll spell it out to you for the benefit of the interested reader.

    Many major British companies are now facing bankruptcy, who are funded by British banks who are themselves effetcively insolvent, and the subsequent losses will be funded by the tax payer.

    Many major Britsh companies are facing bankruptcy? What's new, companies go bankrupt all over the world all the time.

    British banks are more insolvent that Euroland banks?

    I 'm guessing security guard. Or maybe some type of simple clerical work.

    Leave a comment:


  • BlasterBates
    replied
    Originally posted by sasguru View Post
    SO what was the relevance of your post above about "Major British Companies Facing Administration" which implied ordinary non-financial firms were in more trouble than other countries?
    See what I mean about not having a mind like a steel trap? You post complete irrelevant crap like a doddery old fool with Alzheimers.


    PS You still haven't told us if you're a janitor or a security guard.
    I suppose it's difficult to see the relevance of the atricle if you're as thick as pigsh*t, but I'll spell it out to you for the benefit of the interested reader.

    Quite a few British companies are now facing bankruptcy, who are funded by a British bank who is effectively insolvent, and the subsequent losses will be funded by the tax payer.

    Just demonstrates the extent of the corporate debt problem in the UK and the fact that both non-financial and financial companies are in trouble.

    I think if you're as thick as pigsh*t you wouldn't notice when Alzheimers came along.

    Last edited by BlasterBates; 4 January 2012, 11:43.

    Leave a comment:


  • sasguru
    replied
    Originally posted by BlasterBates View Post
    No.....

    The argument was, whether the debt was with foreign firms...i.e. that the UK didn't have a problem itself.

    Lets just look at the thread title again shall we



    But I suppose reading posts properly is difficult if you're as thick as pig sh*t

    SO what was the relevance of your post above about "Major British Companies Facing Administration" which implied ordinary non-financial firms were in more trouble than other countries?
    See what I mean about not having a mind like a steel trap? You post complete irrelevant crap like a doddery old fool with Alzheimers.


    PS You still haven't told us if you're a janitor or a security guard.

    Leave a comment:


  • BlasterBates
    replied
    Originally posted by sasguru View Post
    I thought we were talking about non-financial sector UK corporate debt.
    No.....

    The argument was, whether the debt was with foreign firms...i.e. that the UK didn't have a problem itself.

    Lets just look at the thread title again shall we

    UK doomed by the size of debts
    But I suppose reading posts properly is difficult if you're as thick as pig sh*t

    Leave a comment:

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