"If men were angels, no government would be necessary. If angels were to govern men, neither external nor internal controls on government would be necessary.
In framing a government which is to be administered by men over men, the great difficulty lies in this: you must first enable the government to control the governed; and in the next place oblige it to control itself. "
James Madison, Federalist No. 51
Here in the UK, we could learn much from the discussions that followed American Independence. When creating that great republic, the founding fathers wrestled with two questions. First, how do you create institutions that are robust enough to deal with the ingrained venality of people. Second, how do you ensure that those institutions, controlled by venal individuals, behave themselves.
Here in the UK, how did we fare when it came to the government of our financial institutions? It is not an industry that normally attracts angels. Therefore, there was a need to limit the more destructive activities of bankers.
For at least a century, we had a very competent financial supervisor; the Bank of England. When confronted with anything dubious, the governor would raise an eyebrow a few millimetres, and everyone got the message. While the Bank was in charge the city, there wasn't a single run on a high street bank. When some of the more exotic banks ran into trouble,the BoE effectively and discreetly sorted them out.
In the name of change, New Labour threw into the dustbin all that accumulated regulatory experience. In its place, it established a naive and untested regulator - the FSA. Ten years later, it has proved to be one of the most disastrous decisions during the post war period.
The new agency could not properly control or monitor the banks and their various off-balance sheet shadow activities. The FSA watched helplessly as credit exploded, the housing bubble took off, and bank staff created new value-reducing financial products.
From a very early stage, it must have been obvious to the government that something was terribly wrong at the FSA. The chacellor only needed to look into an estate agent window and see that the financial system was cooking up an almighty crash. Why didn't the government do something to sort out the obvious regulatory failures at the FSA?
New Labour had no interest in controlling the credit boom and didn't want the FSA to crack down on the banks. In the absence of angels, highly unstable industries like finance needs proper government. However, regulation alone is not enough. Politicians needed to ensure that the regulators actually regulated the financial sector.
Here, we come to the deep insight of James Madison. New Labour was unable to "control itself". For ten years, the housing bubble worked for Brown and Blair. Expanding debt levels kept household consumption growing, while wages were stagnating and key sectors of the economy like manufacturing hit one recession after another. The bubble allowed New Labour to spin the myth that the UK economy was thriving when it was in reality drowning in debt. Now that myth is exploding, leaving a terrible financial crisis in its place.
7 comments:
What do you expect, when for years after 1997 we had a PM who didn't even use verbs in some of his sentences: "New Labour New x". The British electorate (not including yours truly) bought an incoherent dream.
Gordon "is a moron" Brown will go down in history as the biggest baffoon in British politics - ever !
"Best chancellor ever"... I don't bloody think so !!!!! His epitaph will read something like... "The man who banned plastic bags" - what a joke that man and New Labour are !!!
What the Tories began, Labour finished.
The ruination of Britain.
There is no-one worth voting for.
Bravo, Alice. A great shame you don't write for one of the big rags, whose journalists are so far gone in self-righteousness their eyes are permanently sealed. And as for the regulatory bodies...corpses, more like, festering in their own juices.
Alice, I think you cut too much slack when it comes to the FSA and New Labour. I, for example, find it extremely difficult to accept that what transpired was a consequence of ineptitude or oversights.
It is my considered belief that the FSA & the Tripartite agreement was established intentionally to scupper regulation... and strongly suspect that key-personnel within the FSA & Treasury were selected intentionally to hamper what regulation was attempted.
John Tiner and Sir John Gieve are worthy of some research. It also strikes me as strange that the post of paymaster general has been filled by the most obviously inappropriate and inept MPs imaginable. It is as if there was something to hide - and it wouldn't do to have anyone who might ask questions hanging about in any position of responsibility.
For some reason, when I try to comment on your post about the scam, I get a "bX-w316iy" error.
You asked what you were doing wrong... I wanted to point you at a relevant site:
http://www.419eater.com/
Asteve,
I know about that site. Actually, your error might have been down to me. I decided to hold off on the 419 post and talk abuot bank bailouts instead.
Alice
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