Friday, November 14, 2008

And Iceland Mr. Brown? Was That Cricket?

I mentioned Brown's response to Iceland, and how in England I keep reading about beggaring your neighbor when it comes to the U.S. I didn't know that I'd get immediate confirmation from The Times:

"In a veiled warning to the next American President, Gordon Brown described protectionism as the “road to ruin” yesterday as international tensions surfaced at the start of the G20 summit in Washington. "

"Mr Brown was already risking confrontation with the President-elect in barely coded criticism of a planned measure to bail out America’s ailing carmakers, a plan Mr Obama supports. “I do think it is really important that we send out a signal today that protectionism would be the road to ruin,” the Prime Minister said, in a speech to the Council of Foreign Relations in New York.

“If we get into a situation where countries made decisions irrespective of what happened anywhere else, then we will see the same problems of other times. The dividing line here is between an open society capable of trading round the world, against a protectionist response that happened in the 1930s and is totally unacceptable.”

The EU said that it was ready to take action against the US at the World Trade Organisation if aid for the stricken US car industry was judged by the European Commission as illegal under international rules. The US Congress approved a $25 billion (£17 billion) aid package for American carmakers in September, although no timetable was fixed for payments to be made."

Sorry old chap. Need to invoke terrorism laws which say that we need to make our own cars. That's cricket.

NB: About Competetion In Crisis:Previous Post:

Situation

1) Investors love public debt in countries with central banks that can print money

Problem

1) Europe doesn't

Solution

1) European bonds backed by national banks jointly ( By the way, I love the phrase "practically riskless)

"The resources available to the EFSF would be used mainly for bank recapitalisation, especially for those banks which rather ‘gamble for resurrection’ than accept the presence of heavy handed interference of national governments. Moreover, the EFSF could also beef up the funding of existing EU instruments for balance of payments assistance to the European neighbourhood. But a key consideration in setting up such an emergency fund should not be the problems that are already known. Given the unpredictable nature of this crisis, a key consideration should be for the EU to prepare for the ‘unknown unknowns’ that are certain to arrive sooner rather than later."

Did they really say 'unknown unknowns'?

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