As the UK slowly winds its way out of the recession, have the Banks learned their lessons?
August 25th, 2009 by tom | Filed under Central banks, Daily News, Debt, Money Management, Recession, Stocks and shares, UK Bank Accounts, UK Banks, UK Small Business, UK employment.
The signs are definitely there: Germany and France have already done it, even Japan, Hong Kong, Singapore and Thailand. The US is still in it, yet in name only. And the UK will be following not long after. To where?
If you haven’t already guessed, the answer is out of recession.
So what happens in post-recession Britain? Have we learned our lessons? Will the man in the street work longer hours, save up to buy that new 42" plasma, that Mediterranean holiday or to upgrade the family car? Or will he fall back into credit euphoria? Will UK businesses cut costs to build up their cash reserves or will they revert to being cash loan and overdraft junkies like before?
And the most leading question of them all is, will the banks be responsible and, if they succeed in becoming autonomous, will they once again become the profit-hungry, bonus-driven monsters that played a significant part in almost bringing the UK economy to total meltdown?
If there is a precedent to prevent the disasters of the first decade of the 21st century ever happening again then it is written in America’s 1933 Glass-Steagall Act. The act was drawn up following the Wall Street Crash that sparked one of the greatest depressions the world has ever known. One of the act’s principle provisions was to disallow risky investment banking and to channel bank funds and lending into the safer realms of retail banking, which the sort the UK public needs to finance the model life style that they deserve: everyday needs.
UK financial analysts hasten to point out that if such a system had been in place from around 2001 onwards, when the profit chasing was at full steam, the checks and balances would have prevented the UK banks from going as far over the top as they did. They would have been unable to hold the UK government to ransom and force the public to become reluctant shareholders in their business. Instead, the British public could have stood back and watched some of the more rickety financial institutions go to the wall, and without too many tears being shed in the process.

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Tags: Banking, British Economy, British Pound, Credit, Debt, Economy, Financial News, Glass-Steagall Act, Money Management, negative equity, Overdraft, post-recession Britain, Recession, UK Banks, UK businesses, UK Economy, UK government, Wall Street Crash
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