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Re: Eurozone will collapse...
Only if the average people have more than £85,000 in savings (£170,000 for a joint account) per bank....
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The financial sector operated perfectly safely for many decades - that much is clear from the first 20 minutes of the documentary being discussed in the other thread just now. It was deregulation of financial services and failure to regulate new financial products that caused the problems, not the existence of the financial sector itself. Similarly, what exactly is an excessive profit? A large profit in a properly competitive marketplace is a sign of success. It is warped, discredited, Marxist thinking in the extreme to assert that it must of necessity indicate exploitation. Who determines the level at which a profit is judged 'excessive'? What action should be taken on excessive profit? Confiscation, or rules that simply prevent a profit being reached? How would such rules be defined? Most pertinent of all, what's the point of regulating profit levels while doing nothing about the way in which those profits were attained? It wasn't profits that caused the 2008 crash, it was the activity undertaken in pursuit of those profits. My contention is that you are targeting your ire in the wrong place. You are doing so because you see "disbanding" and "regulation of profit" as the only two options, when they quite simply aren't. Regulation is most definitely the answer, but it is regulation of behaviour within the industry, not regulation of the outcomes, that is required. |
Re: Eurozone will collapse...
Has this veto actually changed anything then? The EU 'Commissioner for Economic and Monetary Affairs' has said that it doesn't exempt the UK from any additional financial regulations they wish to impose. I guess we knew this already as the treaty didn't contain anything about those regulations but it serves as a reminder.
If anything this may have damaged the chances of stopping those regulations as we are now further removed from a decision making within the EU, as well as possibly causing it's existing members to care less about UK demands. It's looking more like political grandstanding rather than effective bargaining for UK interests. I am also wondering if such regulation is such a bad thing anyway. A year or so ago we were disgusted at how a lack of regulation had allowed banks to cause chaos with our economy and now we are bitterly defending those very same institutions against that regulation being imposed by the EU. When did we suddenly turn full circle on this? Not really sure that it is in the best interests of our country either, that after the last few years nothing has changed other than the debt incurred bailing out banks. What's the best argument we have in their defence? That will go elsewhere? Well so what? That was true before, when the previous government wouldn't impose stricter regulations for fear it would damage the City. It will always be true. If the banks are happy to be bailed out but unhappy to have to abide by rules to prevent gettting into trouble in the first place then they might as well leave. |
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Regulations can be implemented by QMV (qualified majority voting) but taxation would require unanimity (i.e. UK can still veto). AFAIK a lot of regulation is already agreed and set to come in by about 2014.
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---------- Post added at 15:34 ---------- Previous post was at 15:33 ---------- Quote:
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One of the beefs the UK government has is the suggestion that the UK cannot unilaterally impose tougher regulations than the ones set by the EU (I think we're challenging that in the European Court at the moment). Resolution of this complaint may have been one of Cameron's negotiating demands last week. The fact that even this demand was not conceded is, IMO, very revealing of the mindset of the French and German governments in particular.
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Shows what I know...:dunce: |
Re: Eurozone will collapse...
Partially, yes. As always the truth is a little more nuanced, and as Europe is such a charged issue in British politics it's phenomenally difficult to get anything like a balanced commentary on what went on and what the consequences might be.
One thing I did notice, this morning, was how effortlessly *David* Milliband set up a convincing line of opposition to David Cameron's summit performance (likening the situation to Anthony Eden's 'failure' to take us into Europe in 1955). That one line has had more resonance than any of the lightweight jaw-flapping his brother has managed to produce at any point in the last three days. ---------- Post added at 15:48 ---------- Previous post was at 15:46 ---------- ... that same Ed Milliband is currently on his feet castigating the Tories for not paying attention to Michael Heseltine. :erm: ... or the Deputy PM, who is a member of a different political party whose European policy everybody has always known is pretty much the polar opposite of the Tories'. :erm: |
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I was referring to UK regulation of the City etc. which IIRC is coming under Bank of England control as opposed to the FSA's. I think all of the above has to be seen in the context of a relationship with Europe which has proved very difficult over many years and fraught with disagreements. The Franco-German view of the EU has always been substantially different from our own and my feeling is that Cameron did not believe there could be any guarantees that the tax and other regulations could/would not be imposed on the UK by the back door. Given what I hear other EU representative saying after Cameron's veto was used it seems clear to me that there's even disagreement amongst them about how far the existing highly complex treaties go and what is/isn't possible with regard to the UK. As I've said before there's still every chance they'll try to impose new rules/taxes on the UK and we may wind up having to consider leaving the EU altogether. My feeling is that this is what they want. |
Re: Eurozone will collapse...
Cameron's on his feet again now.
LIVE: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-16136672 ---------- Post added at 15:57 ---------- Previous post was at 15:52 ---------- Quote:
If he helps show us the door he will have done us an immense favour. |
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However its evident if we reregulated they would all up and leave. ---------- Post added at 16:07 ---------- Previous post was at 16:00 ---------- Quote:
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