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Anorak News | Whirlpool Economics Won’t Wash

Whirlpool Economics Won’t Wash

by | 9th, October 2008

Hundreds of millions of pounds invested by British local authorities in Iceland’s failed banks look likely to disappear down the Atlantic sinkhole.

In London Gordon Brown put £500bn of public money at risk in a gamble to restore the UK banking system. It works out to £20,000 per taxpayer and bigger than the US $700bn bailout. Don’t lose sight of the approximate £100bn already at risk after the Northern Rock collapse.

Politicians of all shades were backing the paper shuffle as a sensible and sage move…what else could they do?

Meanwhile, down on the farm: Kent County Council – has £50 million deposited in the country which gleefully stuffed us over the Cod Wars and will happily take British money slap the arrogant UK twits with a wet haddock and simply slip away. Other Councils around 20 more, have lost millions.

Transport for London says it has a £40m deposit with a failed Iceland bank. Let’s not forget sensible mums shop at Iceland they don’t throw money at it.

A TfL spokeswoman said: “We are urgently seeking further information on the situation.”

I bet they are. The difference is the money they have invested is lost. The Government has none of the right pieces of paper to shuffle and paste over the cracks. The financial whirlpool has swallowed ratepayers’ money. Another example of greedy local authorities looking for high interest short term returns. Town Hall oinks being shafted by the professionals.

The UK Government did act yesterday to halt Icelandic coffers being spirited away out of British holdings…it was not under any bi-partisan agreement… Brown Bovver Boys used the Anti-Terrorism Act. True.

The Local Government Association is asking Government to cover any losses, after Chancellor Alistair Darling announced he will protect the savings of private individuals in Icelandic banks. Why not? He has bailed out the worst of the British Banking sector but it is noticeable there is a massive split.

HSBC, Standard Chartered, and Abbey National have no intention of raising capital from the State, which confirmed to the jittery City Financiers the £50bn offer is solely for Royal Bank of Scotland, Lloyds TSB, HBOS and Barclays.

AGW



Posted: 9th, October 2008 | In: Reviews Comments (4) | TrackBack | Permalink