The Crisis That Wasn’t
I started writing about the credit crisis in the US and the possible international consequences of that crisis a long time ago. But writing about it gave me a strange feeling. Obviously I was writing about something that interested just a very few. And, equally clear was the feeling that I was writing about something nobody really wanted to hear about. Also, I strongly felt back then, something which major actors in the financial world as well as governments and central banks were more or less in denial about.
I am not happy to have been right. I am not happy that this crisis so far has turned out to be every bit as serious as I and a relatively small number of other people wrote back then. On the contrary, it is sad. Of course.
Today I feel that perhaps it is that unwillingness to see, to listen, to take the right measures at the right time, that has turned what was once a credit crisis in the US, originating in flawed valuation of the so called sub-prime mortgages, into the wild international beast we today speak of as the international financial crisis. Today governments all over the world fight against this crisis. And we have seen, I should think, that the crisis is not due to the price of oil, and that it cannot be solved by interest rate cuts. And a large number of financial institutions, from Lehmann to the Royal Bank of Scotland, have fallen victim to the crisis. At first there was no response. Then there was too little too late, as the Dainish Bank, for instance, noted. And now it is pure panic.
But now the fight is very much an uphill battle. Much time has been lost. And in this case lost time translates into lost confidence. That confidence must, of course, be restored. But it will take time. And even when the confidence in the international financial system has been restored, the battle will not have been won. There will also be serious shake outs in many sectors of the economy, will large companies failing and new winners emerging. And the global recession we are facing will not be over until consumers start increasing their spending again.
I fear they will not do so for quite some time.
See also:
- Financial Times: The week that panic stalked the markets
- Wall Street Journal: EU Writes Menu of Options
- Financial Times: UK to inject £39bn into banks
- Politiken: IMF frygter finansiel nedsmeltning
- Politiken: Eurolande klar med finansiel redningsplan
- Times: Royal Bank of Scotland under state control
- Guardian: Europe follows Brown plan for survival as EU bank bail-out plan is agreed
- Dagbladet: Europeiske land vil samkjøre krisepakker

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I live and have lived in Europe and the US. I like both.
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