sunrise":2vdo2vuk said:
haha! i wish i was educated in Cuba! tbf i think even setting foot thrre would be an education, havent they got the best health care system in the world? brills.
I don't know about the best healthcare system in the world, but they do have networks of informers living amongst the people who report to the secret police if anyone dares to criticise the government...
sunrise":2vdo2vuk said:
My two cents is that you can trace the current recession back to Thatcher and Reagan's deregularisation of banking in the 80s.
That's true. Gordon Brown made sure that whatever regulation remained was rendered ineffective by taking the BoE's powers and dividing them between 3 institutions (BoE, FSA, Treasury) -- the so-called tri-partite regulatory regime. After that, there was no single institution in control in the event of an emergency.
Just one month before the Northern Rock crisis, the FSA privately warned the Treasury that NR only had enough money to stay solvent for "about four weeks". The treasury did nothing. Even as savers queued up to withdraw their savings, 3 days passed before the buck stopped anywhere and Alastair Darling issued a statement to say that the government (translation: "taxpayer") would underwrite all of the NR's deposits.
Brown was warned by Ken Clarke in 1997 or 1998 not to meddle with the organisation of financial regulation -- but giddy with power from a big election victory and arrogantly dismissive of any advice from a Conservative, a man with a PhD in history believed that he was a economic genius who knew how to rein in the financial markets.
How wrong he was.
sunrise":2vdo2vuk said:
Gideon Osborne and Dave would have carried out these 'austerity' measures if they had needed to or not, it is obvious their election promises were empty and that they are using Labour's legacy of debt to push through draconian measures, which are unlikely to hurt other old Etonians...
What's obvious sunrise, is that if someone doesn't re-connect the finances of this country to reality, we're going to end up in the same position as Greece or Ireland.
Removing tax relief from pension growth, printing money to bail out the banks, doubling the national deficit and paying £120 million per day in interest doesn't hurt old Etonians either.
But it
does hurt ordinary people contributing to pensions, regular people who are trying to build their savings and public sector workers who are being axed because the country can't afford to keep them and pay debt interest at the same time.
Thanks, Labour. :roll: