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Re: Britain. Ruled by the banks for the banks.
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Re: Britain. Ruled by the banks for the banks.
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*but who do think that the bankers shafted the world economy due to the disconnect between risk and reward, but that they were also supported in this by governments who deregulated too far and by consumers who spent too much without thinking through who was going to have to eventually pay for this cornucopia of consumer goods and housing. |
Re: Britain. Ruled by the banks for the banks.
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I am not one of those who thinks cuts are the only ways to make up shortfalls. ---------- Post added at 09:33 ---------- Previous post was at 09:31 ---------- Quote:
Also the shareholder mentality I moan about a lot, a lot of shares are owned by financial institutes so its they who have also pushed the growth at any price mentality as well. The damage to society is huge by these financial companies. Its sad you cant see they have simply got too big. |
Re: Britain. Ruled by the banks for the banks.
£54 billion is a lot of extra taxes - 12% of the total UK tax revenue.
Would you be willing to pay an additional 12% in Income Tax, NI, VAT, etc? btw, you are making an incorrect assumption about not seeing that the banks have got too big, but I don't agree with your proposal cutting them off at the knees - I think they need more regulation, and as I have said before frequently, more connect between risk and reward (and you appear to be conflating hedge funds and stockbrokers with investment banks). |
Re: Britain. Ruled by the banks for the banks.
yeah I would pay it.
Its hardly going to bankrupt me. NI and income tax that is. The entire 11% wouldnt be lost, thats a figure buffed up. |
Re: Britain. Ruled by the banks for the banks.
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The fact remains that it is the global method of operating within the global financial system and until and if another system is created, a country is either a player or potentially relegating themselves towards third world status. The problem is that the workings of micro and macro finance is multi faceted and to look at one element in isolation to the whole is a distortion which can lead to simplistic answers but with complicated unintended consequences. Our high street banks tried to elevate themselves from already, in some instances, major global players to mega players and made mistakes for which we will all have to pay. A simplistic answer would be to bring back the restrictions of Glass-Steagall which may or may not happen but cannot happen until the complexity of cross banking debt is resolved. Progressively they have to have their balance sheets rebuilt so that at some point a separation between retail and speculative banking would be possible but not whilst the retail sector is still entwined. It might take years or decades but we have to grim and bear it or we could all go down with the banks. As for the news articles and the film. It is so easy to point out what is wrong, what went wrong and how but what does that achieve beyond causing angst among those innocently affected. The solutions may be long, complicated and painful but within a global system that is dependent on initiatives from the source it is pointless having the public getting all hot under the collar about something they cannot comprehend and potentially demanding unilateral decisions. Luddite like demands from those who do not understand serves no purpose and whether they like it or not we live in a globalised world from which an opt out is not really an option. |
Re: Britain. Ruled by the banks for the banks.
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Re: Britain. Ruled by the banks for the banks.
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Re: Britain. Ruled by the banks for the banks.
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foreign_exchange_market If anyone can stand the tedium of reading all the way through it will become obvious that in that particular field we are the major player of first resort. However the EU wants us to apply unilaterally on their behalf and for their benefit a Tobin tax which as it would be unilateral would instantly kill the flow through London and divert all London's business to another major centre with the most likely beneficiary being the USA. Even after Cameron's NO they still think they can get us through some other loophole and force a tax on anything with a Euro cross. I think they might try and we will have to fight that corner via the courts because one of the largest traded contracts is the Euro\Dollar. I fail to understand the mixed messages which have come from Merkel and Sarkosy. At one point they saw the tax as a boost to Europe. At another point they desired to stem the supposed volatility of the Euro crosses by taxing transactions but failed to realise that only London came even remotely within their remit. At yet another point they pointed to the fact that London transacts 60% of Europe's financial transactions and thought that as we are not within the Euro it is inappropriate. They have swung from envious money seekers to blame allocators and the City is the target. They talk as though the Tobin tax is either potentially bountiful or protectionist. On both counts they are wrong. Trade in London would transfer out to the USA which thwarts Tobin tax benefits and any attempt at protectionism would be thwarted thousands of miles away. As the question posed was would the banks leave. Don't think so but the business would with 100% certainty. The Wikipedia gives the major players but there are plenty more and for sure they have a presence in all of the listed countries involved in that particular type of trade. The American branches could most probably triple their throughput and take all the business from the UK leaving the UK branches to shrink down to deal with whatever was left. Like it or loath it the City of London is one institutional base we have of great global significance which if destroyed by the pointlessness of envious European eyes would leave us a lot poorer and Europe no richer. I can see no other purpose in Merkel and Sarkosy's demands other than to insist on something which was destructive and to which we could not agree. It was a take the exit door card by people bereft of ideas on how to sort out their own problems and a damaging political manoeuvre within a federalist political agenda. |
Re: Britain. Ruled by the banks for the banks.
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Paying an extra 11% tax wouldnt be nice but I could deal with it. Its not the case of been able to afford its more a case of willingness to pay it. Remember income tax levels are historically "very" low. If someone doesnt want to pay for something the easiest thing to say is "I cant afford it". ---------- Post added at 06:30 ---------- Previous post was at 06:27 ---------- Quote:
Whether or not they would eventually leave if their moaning got them nowhere, I have no idea as the government always backs down. |
Re: Britain. Ruled by the banks for the banks.
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Guardian |
Re: Britain. Ruled by the banks for the banks.
How far are we away from 1970s income tax levels.
and you keep quoting total tax, I mean income tax. how mich do the elite pay in tax compared to historically. very low. |
Re: Britain. Ruled by the banks for the banks.
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Re: Britain. Ruled by the banks for the banks.
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Gordon Brown rearranged tax levels precisely for the benefit of easily fooled persons such as yourself, who would look at their income tax bill and believe the lie that they were better off simply because less was being taken off them at the point where they earned it. Ultimately it is individuals who pay taxes, directly or indirectly, as %ages of earning or spending or indirectly through the effect of taxes on shop shelf prices. Those who are able to see further than the end of their own noses, however, understand that Gordon's smoke-and-mirrors approach to the tax system did not make joe public better off. |
Re: Britain. Ruled by the banks for the banks.
I never said I am better off, I said income tax levels are historically low.
The shift in tax policy was partially for stealth but also to shift the burden from one part of society to another. All types of tax are not equal to each other. 20billion of VAT tax is not the same type of burden as 20billion of income tax. |
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