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Posts under ‘Economic crisis’

The banking crisis and credit crunch are the product of regulation and government policy and the way to get more safety into capitalism (which most people still accept as the way to go) is to insist that transparency and fear are the best policemen.

Depression or recession: how bad?

Posted by RDN under Economic crisis on 15 February 2009. No comments.

It is commonly said that we are facing “the worst” recession or depression for decades or even a century or so. If this is true, how much does it matter? More »

Crosby isn’t the worst rat this week

Posted by RDN under Economic crisis on 12 February 2009. No comments.

I have no idea how much of the Banking Crisis can be blamed on Sir James Crosby, but there is certainly an unseemly rush to blame him for everything now. The Prime Minister, politicians, and journalists are all piling in and it’s ugly. More »

Great British bankers!

Posted by RDN under Economic crisis / Politics and campaigns on 10 February 2009. No comments.

The four ex-leaders of HBOS and RBS were impressive in their account of their parts in the Banking Crisis. They were smarter and more interesting than most of their questioners from the Treasury Select Committee today. More »

Shareholders will save the banks

Posted by RDN under Economic crisis on 7 February 2009. No comments.

Is it time to blame shareholders for the credit crunch? I’ve tried thinking through blaming nearly everyone else and was surprised to see that for some reason I’d left the firms’ owners off the list. That’s weird, since I normally assume that shareholders are the ultimate arbiters of a firm’s values. More »

Mr Cameron’s “Capitalism With a Conscience” is feeble

Posted by RDN under Economic crisis / Politics and campaigns on 31 January 2009. No comments.

I am not an economist or a politician but I still feel confident in pointing out the silliness of my leader’s belief that capitalism must discover niceness. More »

Unemployment: worse than 20s & 30s – or 80 & 90s?

Posted by RDN under Economic crisis / Politics and campaigns on 2 December 2008. No comments.

Unemployment is likely to get quite or very bad. The numbers unemployed may reach 1980s or 1990s levels, or even 1930s levels. Here’s a comparative sketch of the miseries ahead. In a new way, they may be worse than ever. More »

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