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The spectre of nationalisation

Economist Original article ›

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Its going to be very difficult to adopt the bad bank option in current circumstances, where the banks find their situation continually and rapidly deteriorating with renewed loss of public confidence and collapsing share prices. The efforts with the first TARP under Treasury Secretary Paulson to isolate the toxic assets of banks did not take off and had to be diverted to capital injections for precisely this reason. Banks in November and December 2008 went through a continually escalating problem situation, with losses, collapsing share prices and so on, and the government had no breathing room to develop the bad bank solution. In some cases decisions had to be made in a few days to prevent the collapse of some banking institution like Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley or Citicorp. At the same time its very clear that there can be no restoration of confidence in lending, and no recovery, without lending by banks, without a bad bank to separate these toxic assets from the banking system in the USA. The Swedish and American example in the 1990's of a bad bank, was possible because the banks were either gone bust, or under government ownership. With the banks in private hands, it is somewhere between difficult to impossible to value these toxic assets without serious problems. So nationalizing these banks becomes the only serious option, which would become more acceptable as the crisis unfolds in 2010, and it becomes clear that one way or another the government is guaranteeing these assets. Banks are in reality entirely dependent on the US government for capital and support, and it would not be wise to pretend otherwise. The safest and most direct option would be to mitigate the risks of nationalization, with prudent safeguards, and develop the bad bank option with the government in ownership of banks, in which case the bad bank option can proceed quickly.

The Economist magazine and other experts come out in favor of government takeover of banks in 2009 to proceed quickly with restructuring

02/03/2009

The Economist magazine coming out in favor of nationalization for highly overleveraged and badly managed banks in the U.S.

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The Big Dither

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Obama’s Ersatz Capitalism

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As the crisis deepens and more banks become insolvent, nationalization has become a serious option for the government.

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Irreversible Damage: Why Little Action on Banking Can Do Great Harm.

New York Times 04/30/2010

The Big Dither

New York Times 03/06/2009

Obama’s Ersatz Capitalism

New York Times 04/01/2009

Rescue of Banks Hints at Nationalization

New York Times 01/16/2009

U.K. Boosts Its Bailout As Bank Losses Rise

Wall Street Journal 01/20/2009

Should Obama seize Citigroup

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