Viewing 40 posts - 1 through 40 (of 69 total)
  • And we wont be fooled again…
  • olddog
    Full Member

    So 5 years ago the world’s economy crashed as a result of very rich people gambling with financial products that they didn’t really understand to make themselves even richer – the taxpayers bailed out the financial sector to keep the train on the tracks and we’ve been paying for it ever since. There was a lot of righteous anger about this at the time – you may remember?

    5 years later the story has been successfully shifted. Apparently we are all in this together apart from the welfare scroungers and the immigrants who seem to be bearing the brunt of the anger…the right has pulled of a coup that is remarkable. Even more so when Farage is economically on the right (as well as everything else) and used to be a commodities broker.

    How did that happen, why has everyone forgotten why things went wrong?

    molgrips
    Free Member

    People didn’t really KNOW why things went wrong. They just thought ‘grrrr rich bankers!’ when it was in the news, now they think ‘grrr immigrants!’

    nemesis
    Free Member

    Say something often enough and loudly enough and it becomes the truth. I blame Labour for being absolutely useless in trying to set the story. Dare I say we’d be better off if some of the more unpleasant spin types from the Labour party of the 90s were still running the show…

    (to be clear, I actually blame those putting the stories out but I wish we had a more effective opposition)

    zippykona
    Full Member

    Zero hours contracts are the biggest scandal.
    How long before we have to stand outside the factory and auction ourselves off for the lowest price?

    ernie_lynch
    Free Member

    with financial products that they didn’t really understand

    What makes you think they didn’t understand what they were doing ?

    Perceived wisdom now claims that offering 125% mortgages is not sensible, do you honestly think that previously no one understood the risks involved behind offering 125% mortgages ?

    Don’t confuse the risks a gambler is prepared to make with them not understanding the risks.

    molgrips
    Free Member

    Offering big mortgages isn’t much of a risk in a rising market. Some will default, but overall the bank will make a killing.

    ernie_lynch
    Free Member

    😀

    geetee1972
    Free Member

    do you honestly think that previously no one understood the risks involved behind offering 125% mortgages ?

    Well apparently the people who bought those products didn’t…..

    bikebouy
    Free Member

    But it’s all alright now isn’t it.
    Relatively short sharp recession with Political Parties claiming the high moral ground and standing steadfast when firms went to the wall, Banks bolstered by Billions are now being paid back with interest, families getting what they want in both financial and moral terms, easing interest rates with lots of pre warnings about rises giving forewarning they will go up in the next year “so you better get ready and make provision” A new order in Financial control that now has some bite but the main change is all the old guard that were so prolific in the industry have been sidelined, retired, gorton rid of and a fresh new culture emerging.
    So it’s all all right now isn’t it. Isn’t it?

    nemesis
    Free Member

    There’s definitely an element of people figuring that if “everyone” is doing it, it must be ok. Or at least, I won’t be on my own if it goes tits up (which always seems scant consolation to me).

    Junkyard
    Free Member

    Markets dont rise for ever and capitalism is nothing but boom and bust as a quick glimpse of a graph will show anyone.

    People didn’t really KNOW why things went wrong.

    they do it is just that they have been fooled into blaiming other poor people for this

    What is worse is that the are voting for a party more right wing and with policies that will hamper the poor more than even the Tories

    UKIP is not about helping poor ordinary people it is about making sure only poor ordinary indigenous people get screwed by big business rather than immigrants.

    It is like Turkeys voting for Xmas

    Basically those who have all the money and all the power are happy to have us scapegoat immigrants and the EU rather than camp at St Pauls and try and hold them to account

    olddog
    Full Member

    So they knew what they were doing and let it happen anyway…?

    The people selling the mortgages didn’t care the risk was under-priced the risk, because they were on big commission.

    The people who financed the mortgages initially didn’t care because they wrapped up the sub-prime with good mortgages into collateralised debt obligations.

    These were miss-rated as AAA by the ratings agencies then sold on and repacked and sold on. The people who ended up with them didn’t know what they were buying, didn’t understand the risks. But with the nature of financial markets and speculation bubbles, money makes money very quickly as the herd instinct kicks in – until the wheel comes off. This is pretty mainstream analysis – there is lots written on it.

    Warren Buffet claims he didn’t understand what was going on, and I think he knows a thing or two about financial investment

    In a sense that doesn’t matter – it was failings of a small number of people who were not as clever as they thought they were, making money out of financial trading, that brought down the real economy in which we all work and we are still paying the costs – but somehow blaming poor people and immigrants.

    molgrips
    Free Member

    So they knew what they were doing and let it happen anyway…?

    Yes, because they knew they’d make a mint.

    Just like in the dotcom bubble. People were asking why investors didn’t see it coming – well, they did. Everyone knew it was going to crash, but they also knew that before it did they could make a ton of money if they got out in time.

    I think he knows a thing or two about financial investment

    Sure, but he doesn’t know everything. I know a lot about software engineering but I don’t know exactly how Barclays run their online banking site or if it’s well written.

    jivehoneyjive
    Free Member

    It was certainly some dodgy dealings within the banking industry that lead to the financial collapse, and strangely, the rich are now richer…

    It’s almost as if the ruling elite have realized that with modern technology, people have access to a lot more information that lets us think for ourselves and realize the exploitation that occurs globally; in order to counter too much thinking, they create a climate of financial insecurity to keep everyone fearful and working harder…

    Well now the cynical theory is out of the way, there is a positive way to combat some of the inequalities inherent in the current system:

    [video]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qYtNwmXKIvM[/video]

    more here

    also, if you haven’t seen it yet, I strongly recommend setting aside the time to watch this Oscar Winning documentary on the subject:

    [video]http://vimeo.com/57527797[/video]

    teamhurtmore
    Free Member

    olddog – Member
    So 5 years ago the world’s economy crashed as a result of very rich people gambling with financial products that they didn’t really understand to make themselves even richer

    Well if that was all that went wrong, it would be pretty easy to solve! BUT, if we misdiagnose the reason from the crisis we are unlikely to find the correct solutions.

    why has everyone forgotten why things went wrong?

    They haven’t. It’s just that there is no quick fix solution and lots of conflicts between policy choices.

    Still under a Tory government no less, we will soon be paying £1billion a week on interest payments!

    ernie_lynch
    Free Member

    Well apparently the people who bought those products didn’t…..

    Read the posts a bit more carefully and you’ll see that the claim was made that “very rich people gambling with financial products that they didn’t really understand to make themselves even richer” doesn’t refer to “the people who bought those products”.

    The people who took the risks by offering dodgy credit knew exactly what they were doing.

    ninfan
    Free Member

    Who’s more stupid? the people who borrow 125% of what a house is worth, or the bank who lends to them?

    Who’s more stupid, the people who borrow five times their annual income, or the bank who lends to them?

    Who’s more stupid, the bank who lends five times someones income at 125% of the value , or the people who invested their savings in that bank, either as shares or deposits?

    Who’s more stupid, the government who all bails all the above out, rather than suffer the consequences of their actions, or the people who voted for them?

    olddog
    Full Member

    dotcom bubble was peanuts in comparison.

    By 2008 there was $600trillion in annual trading on derivatives (including CDOs) against world GDP of about $55trillion. That is hugely distoring even when it is making money.

    The who were wrapping up the bad debt into CDOs knew what they were doing. The people rating it and buying it didn’t understand the risks – the models for measuring the risk were seriously inadequate

    I can’t believe that the traders at Northern Rock thought hhmmm lets buy all this junk stock so we can make some money now and bring down the bank in a couple of years. They may not have cared and so didn’t look beyond the immediate because the incentives were wrong, but I think they were primarily greedy/stupid rather than evil.

    teamhurtmore
    Free Member

    ernie_lynch – Member
    The people who took the risks by offering dodgy credit knew exactly what they were doing.

    Having worked with them, I only wish that was true!

    cheekyboy
    Free Member

    Zero hours contracts are the biggest scandal.
    How long before we have to stand outside the factory and auction ourselves off for the lowest price?

    Whats a factory Dad ?

    enfht
    Free Member

    Labour pissing our money down the drain was not caused by bankers. We overspent for too many years, racking up huge debt on credit. The “No Cuts” placard-waving brigade are still in denial.

    fatboyslo
    Free Member

    zippykona – Member
    Zero hours contracts are the biggest scandal.
    How long before we have to stand outside the factory and auction ourselves off for the lowest price

    Whats a factory ?

    Seems to me the biggest scandal is the decline of manufacturing inthis country

    Zero hours contracts have been around for Donkeys years… it’s just the name that has changed … used to be called agency work, had 2 spells of that over 20 years ago and not only did I not know when I was working from day to day , quite often I didn’t know where 🙁 or even IF 😥

    jam-bo
    Full Member

    What recession?

    ernie_lynch
    Free Member

    Having worked with them, I only wish that was true!

    Yes of course, those responsible for issuing 125% mortgages couldn’t possibly have predicted what might go wrong. Specially so soon after the recession of the early nineties which resulted in historical levels of homes being repossessed and a multitude of people stuck with negative equity for years.

    🙄

    molgrips
    Free Member

    Zero hours contracts have been around for Donkeys years

    Of course but the scandal is the number of workers now on them against their will.

    teamhurtmore
    Free Member

    Yes, they got it wrong. Many were muppets and even more believed in what they were doing. That’s not to deny there were the truly cynical involved at the same time. I find the elevation of AJ and Barclays into a Mister Nice Guy given his response to the crisis (more than the build up) truly abhorrent.

    I worked for the last UK bank to go tits up and not be rescued in 1995. The level of ignorance about what was happening was breathtaking. Combine that with greed and you have a heady cocktail.

    Still we had authorities deliberately holding interest rates artificially low (to cover up their failings in the past) and flicking the markets with liquidity. Ensure that risk is mispriced and then encourage folk to take it. brilliant. Thank goodness the same thing isn’t happening again. Oh, wait a minute…..

    mrmonkfinger
    Free Member

    The “No Cuts” placard-waving brigade are still having their wages paid by the overspend.

    FTFY, possibly.

    ernie_lynch
    Free Member

    Yes, they got it wrong.

    You mean that to give someone more money than their home is worth, because they don’t have much money and are a little short of cash, is just “wrong” ?

    Why ? Explain it to me. I don’t quite understand. It sounds ever so complicated.

    teamhurtmore
    Free Member

    Don’t do yourself down Ernie, you understand fully. But not getting into a convoluted debate. The only point I was a making that it is unwise to assume that bankers fully understood the risks they were running. Ditto the authorities that were meant to be regulating them.

    P.s. Remember where the policy that your are highlighting originated and why.

    ninfan
    Free Member

    You mean that to give someone more money than their home is worth

    Thats not quite fair though – originally they were loans meant for ‘fixer uppers’ – the money was there to renovate the properties and therefore the value of the house would increase and cover the loan.

    but people took the piss and spent it on new cars and TV’s, fuelling Gordon’s economic miracle – ‘No more boom and bust’!

    and thats why the Government never moved to stop it!

    Trimix
    Free Member

    So who has / had the power to control this mess – the gov. But they failed to put the controls in place.

    Blaming greedy people for being greedy and stupid people for being stupid is pointless. We should look to those who are meant to govern.

    Sadly though, the government seems to be made of greedy and stupid people.

    ernie_lynch
    Free Member

    So the global credit crunch occurred because people spent money on cars and TVs instead of renovating their properties ?

    Well I never….every day’s a schoolday as they say.

    brooess
    Free Member

    The Credit Crunch wasn’t the cause of the crisis, it was just the crisis making itself known.

    Postwar economic growth slowed up in the 70’s and 80’s but rather than accept that and in order to meet our expectation of a continued rise in standard of living, we de-regulated Finance and got rid of the Gold Standard in order to generate ‘wealth’.

    The added pressure of the rise of China from 1980’s onwards only encouraged this strategy…

    Human nature being short-termist as it is, and a generally low standard of education in economics and finance meant we all – bankers, companies, consumers etc fell for this illusion and spent well beyond our means… the credit crunch was the natural conclusion when the whole ill-formed scheme finally fell apart.

    The system is too complex for one party to bring it all down and you can hardly blame bankers and politicians when we all run around getting ourselves into unaffordable levels of debt to support some kind of consumerist ‘dream’

    Lifer
    Free Member

    ernie_lynch – Member

    So the global credit crunch occurred because people spent money on cars and TVs instead of renovating their properties ?

    Well I never….every day’s a schoolday as they say.

    Yep and Gordon was responsible for the sub-prime fiasco in the US, apparently.

    brooess
    Free Member

    when the whole ill-formed scheme finally fell apart.

    Actually, on reflection, and as per the OP – it hasn’t fully fallen apart. The recent insanity in the London housing market tells you people still seem to think they can borrow their way to an unreasonably high standard of living, and banks/government seem unwilling to tell us the hard truth.
    Which isn’t that we’re skint, just that we’re going to have to work harder and smarter and accept a lower standard of living now that globalisation’s changed the balance of global power in favour of developing economies

    ninfan
    Free Member

    So the global credit crunch occurred because people Borrowed money that they didn’t have and spent it on cars and TVs instead of renovating their properties ?

    FTFY

    Gordon was responsible for the sub-prime fiasco in the US

    Nope, exactly the same thing was going on in the US and other countries, Gordon was perfectly happy for it to happen here and didn’t move to insulate the UK from it in any way, and his biggest crime of all was to bail people (both investors and borrowers) out of the mess they created for themselves – and thats why its still going on

    ernie_lynch
    Free Member

    a generally low standard of education in economics

    You mean like believing that we got rid of the Gold Standard because of an economic slowdown in the 70s and 80s ?

    Lifer
    Free Member

    ninfan – Member

    Nope, exactly the same thing was going on in the US and other countries, Gordon was perfectly happy for it to happen here and didn’t move to insulate the UK from it in any way, and his biggest crime of all was to bail people (both investors and borrowers) out of the mess they created for themselves – and thats why its still going on

    While the tories cried that he wasn’t going far enough with the deregulation that allowed this to happen.

    Not a fan of Gordon but FFS it’s a completely spurious narrative.

    brooess
    Free Member

    exactly the same thing was going on in the US, Gordon was perfectly happy for it to happen here

    Don’t forget Iceland and most of Southern Europe has gone pop too.

    The big problem IMO with the analysis of our situation is that it’s somehow caused by a single group or person – politicians/bankers/Gordon Brown.

    It’s a systemic problem with Western economies loaded up with debt and an illusion of wealth which has been building for 3+ decades… hence no one government or political party appears able to articulate a solution

    olddog
    Full Member

    It is true the sub-prime problem was the tripping point in a deeper malaise. But the financialisation of economy which it represents is the bigger problem.

    Basically, money was and is still increasingly being used to make money, rather than finance making real things that are then sold to make the money + profit back. The profits from financial services have been growing whilst from manufacturing falling (they crossed in the US in the mid 1990s) and wages as a proportion of GDP have been falling since the late 70s. This means that there is a lot of capital kicking around that is looking for somewhere to be invested – in the run up to the crisis it was (a) consumer debt, to make up the shortfall in wages and keep consumption/aggregate demand in the economy up (b) housing speculation. Clever packaging of financial products hid the increasing riskiness of it all for a while – but just made it worse when it crashed.

    This problem hasn’t been solved as far as I can see – but inequalities ie wages falling behind GDP growth are recognised as a real economic problem. Trouble is it is hard to see what the answer is without fundamentally changing the nature of capitalism

    It is a lot more complicated than this to be fair – but I am supposed to be writing a paper rather than posting on the internet.

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