The ever excellent
chris_dillow_fd has an excellent
summary of the banks reaction to Northern Rock at Stumbling and Mumbling, and naturally I concur completely: This episode shows that many bosses don't really believe in free markets. Instead, they are like the slaggiest single parent. They pretend to be victims, and expect the state to save people from the
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It's one of those attention grabbing analogies, had to quote it, right? Tis a good article overall though.
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The problem is that the right wing has pretty succesfully hijacked the idea of a free market. I wouldn't mind governments saying they're for the free market if they weren't so sodding hypocritical about the whole thing.
(I'm pro-subsidisation, I don't find the idea that the government should help folks out if there's a social need, I just get a bit fed up of hearing about a half-assed, half-hearted approach to the free market from people who should know better...)
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Yup, which is why I want to work on claiming them back.
Plus, I've gone away from subsidising in favour of basic essentials--citizen's basic income and get rid of the rest.
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It should have been enough that the BoE operated as a lender of last resort, thus guaranteeing Northern Rocks survival. It was only the stupid if understandable reaction of NR savers rushing to withdraw all their money which meant the situation stepped outside of the market and into the hands of the government.
The banks didn't loan in the first place because they were concerned they wouldn't get their money back. What's wrong with that? If NR borrows strangely and gets itself into difficulty, then that's just a flaw of it's financial policy and those who have borrowed more prudently 'win'.
I'm not sure that I get the point of the article. Of course a business in the shit is going to ask for government help. Regardless of your principals or ideas about the free market, you're still going to take any help you can get, right?
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I am still surprised the government was pushed into this so easily though. Perhaps it's an attempt to keep Gordon Brown's (and Alastair Darling's) economic record shiny (at least for those who don't know anything about economics) or maybe it's because they knew the crisis could spread easily and had to take dramatic and exceptional steps to prevent this.
Anyway, I thought it was common knowledge opposition to subsidies by corporations stopped at the their bank accounts. Anything less would be an ideological commitment to something, and we know what to think of that.
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Anyway, the uncertainty and instability of the market is what keeps us stable, strangely enough. The constant competition and change keeps our market on the path toward prosperity.
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True free markets are only available with a decent socialist setup ;-)
MatGB, Market Socialist (Millite tendency)
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But people that blame markets for being 'of the right' are just wrong, and those like Tebbitt that think that the definition of 'right' is to support markets are daft.
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