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EDITOR’S TAKE: The pitchfork party have been led slightly astray


COMMENTS

I think your conclusions are incorrect because it was not necessary to save the banks, it was just necessary to save people's deposits, and that can be done by the Central Bank by taking over the bankrupt banks  Read all comments »

With the possible exception of Nick Griffin, bankers are among the least popular people in the UK. No longer is it acceptable to be one in polite society. No longer do people even want to go into the industry – a new study by research company Universum reveals no banks at all in the UK’s top 30 employers.

The situation has been brewing since the bailouts. When Obama met leaders of the largest surviving US banks at the White House in April, he didn’t mince his words: “My administration is the only thing between you and the pitchforks,” he is rumoured to have told them over a glass of water.

Six months on, and the pitchforks are still out. Moreover, they are being wielded with increasing ferocity. In the UK, that ferocity is likely to increase once a new government is elected next year and public sector cuts begin in earnest.

A friend who holds a senior job in a quango which will probably be eradicated under a Conservative administration sums up the prevailing attitude: “I am about to lose my job due to government cuts, and what’s particularly galling is that the cuts are being made to reduce the budget deficit after we bailed out all these ******* in the City who are now paying themselves huge bonuses.”

In the advancing ‘age of austerity,’ that sentiment is likely to be magnified. The Telegraph this week warned of horrors such as a 7p increase in income tax and an end to heating in schools as the government seeks to balance its budget.

As this situation hurtles towards us, banks aren’t making it any easier on themselves by accruing apparently large bonuses. Nor is the popular press doing much to stifle the opprobrium.

Behind the deficit

It has been left to Goldman Sachs, which appears to have belatedly realized the damage to its reputation inflicted by the giant squid moniker, to try and defend itself (and by association, the industry).

This week, Brian Griffiths, an international advisor at Goldman, tried to argue that inequality is good, while Lloyd Blankfein endeavoured to make the case for Goldman's contribution to growth.

In the UK, however, it is more apt to look at the figures released this week regarding the British government’s budget deficit.

As the table below shows, the UK budget deficit is 20% higher than it would have been without the bailout of the British banking system. However, even without 'financial sector interventions', the underlying deficit is high and rising.

Budget deficit

Source: ONS

This is partly because welfare spending is increasing. But it’s also because the tax take is falling. If banks hadn’t been bailed out, the economy would have collapsed and the deficit would have been larger still. By bailing out banks, taxpayers were effectively also bailing out their future selves.

It’s also instrumental to look at precisely where the UK government money that propped up the financial system went: out of total 'interventions’ of £142bn, £116bn went to Northern Rock and Bradford and Bingley – not to investment banks.

None of this is to condone excessive risk taking. Nor is it to suggest a return to the days of CDOs squared. It is, however, to say that if aggrieved taxpayers form lynch mobs to reclaim their money from investment bankers, they may not be in command of all the facts.

COMMENTS

M&A, Investment Banking / M & A,  Fri 23 Oct 09

I think your conclusions are incorrect because it was not necessary to save the banks, it was just necessary to save people's deposits, and that can be done by the Central Bank by taking over the bankrupt banks

Add your comment »

HedgePest, Hedge Funds,  Fri 23 Oct 09

A "senior person working for a quango"? They should be asked to pay their salary back.

They are almost certainly in a spurious job created by some leftie think tank and will be a valueless waste of space and a drain on taxpayers money.

Add your comment »

Sarah, Editor, eFinancialCareers, HR & Recruitment,  Fri 23 Oct 09

@M&A - Lehman didn't have retail deposits, but sending it into administration caused the system to malfunction because of the risk that its counterparties would also go under. Admittedly, this could have been mitigated by a decent resolution process, but we didn't have that at the time, hence the system as a whole needed to be propped up,


@HedgePest - he works for a regional development agency, and allocates money from the EU.

Add your comment »

Bill, Credit,  Sat 24 Oct 09

CDOs squared are good but you're too dump to understand them!

Add your comment »

Romance and Penmanship, Investment Banking / M & A,  Sun 25 Oct 09

Sarah will you please marry me? Your lines have a gentle touch of affection in them and I'm taken in. We could pen some fine lines together...

Add your comment »

dd, Commodities,  Tue 27 Oct 09

"you're too dump to understand them!" 

Heh.

Add your comment »

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