Tuesday 20 January 2009

Brace brace brace

Just as makenomics.com predicted in it's first post, we are on the brink of financial disaster, and yesterdays Evening Standard agrees. Despite a 2nd injection of cash yesterday (it's not a bailout but insurance, honestly) banks shares plummeted, RBS saw a 68% drop in their share price, Lloyd's 32%, Barclay's 25% and HSBC 11%. The confidence and trust that the markets are built on has vanished, and will continue to do so. Beware anyone walking through the city over the next couple of weeks, the ground may simply crumble away beneath you.

But this is not the only bad news to emerge today, forget those holidays abroad, the pound has dropped to $1.3965, it's lowest level since 2001. BBC news reported that some credit rating agencies are listing blue-chip companies as safer than UK government debt, remember what that type of rating did for the Argentine economy.

As the pound gets weaker, inflation is falling but how far will it go, especially since we're just about to print billions in new currency? Once the VAT cut drops out of inflation figures, as it's expected to do by the end of the year the expansionist monetary policy could well see inflation soar for years to come.

It's the opinion of this liberal blogger that, seeing as how there's no macro-econometric model around that can interpret these volatile times perhaps we should just stop trying to jump-start the economy quite so violently and quite so often. Between VAT cuts, expansionist monetary policy, a disastrously weak currency, recession, a minuscule inflation rate, plummeting asset prices, chaotic markets and trillion dollar bailouts, just how can we have any idea of what we're doing, even in the shortest of runs. Even the IS-LM model has it's limitations. Franklin

2 comments:

  1. Nice try whoever you are but looks like you've been busted!

    ReplyDelete
  2. gd post! It will just b hard 2 promote ur blog now, aftr ur vain attempt of gettin attention via sendin anonymous emails...

    ReplyDelete