This is exactly the point I made yesterday (here). The Greens' helping hand can just as well cost the taxpayers when the banks come begging to Leni again... post-Nama.
And this bring us to Mr Cowen's performance on today's Prime Time. Hmmm - the Gods gotta be laughing somewhere in ancient Rome's temples. Mr Cowen now wants to bring living standards back to 2007 peak levels by taxing us to death, issuing more debt against our future incomes than was ever issued in this country history before, spending like a drunken sailor, not reforming public sector pay and pensions, running vast deficits and... hold your breath... restoring credit and liquidity flows with a Nama-style undertaking?
You can almost see this working in theory, can't you.
You can't? Well, to be honest neither can I. Here is why, quickly:
Nama is about working out bad loans written against bad assets. It is, therefore, an investment undertaking with a life-span of decades. Liquidity provision is a short-term undertaking aiming to increase money supply in the economy that is free to move across the economy.
Nama bonds will not provide such a 'liquidity event' for three reasons:
- As an investment undertaking Nama will need credit of its own to work through the loans and underlying assets, so to assume that banks will simply lend-out the €60bn pot of cash they will get from Nama automatically assumes that the cost of working out Nama loans will be financed through some other sources. Is Brian Cowen actually envisioning another issue of debt to finance this undertaking?
- As an undertaking to repair balance sheets of the banks, Nama will fund capital base, not lending funds on banks books. In other words, for banks with an average 173% loans to deposits ratio, any cash they can get will have to be locked in a vault. Nama funds cannot be disbursed in new loans.
- The Greens have just shaved off a large chunk of the 'liquidity' pool through their 'risk sharing' gizmo.
Finally, Cowen refused to step in to offer even a momentary protection to ordinary households when he was asked if mortgage defaulters will be protected. Mr Cowen has made it now record-clear that his Government is unconcerned about consumers, taxpayers and ordinary entrepreneurs. It is banks who must be rescued.
The more they (Leni, Ahearne, Cowen - oh, and why not call Mary Coughlan out of her retirement to pedal Nama-cakes too) dig, the deeper is the hole... after all they did dig Brian Cowen out of his hole where he resided for some 5 months post April Budget and back into the RTE studios - twice within the span of 5 days last...
If you have the time I'd be interested to know what articles are available from the 3 Nobel Prize Winners which criticize NAMA. Who knows it might even convince me to reconsider my pro-NAMA position :-)
ReplyDelete@Holbrook: Paul Krugman is one at least: he made the point that bailout money for the banks (which is what they'll have, as soon as they exchange NAMA bonds for cash at the ECB) will flow out of the country immediately to the holders of securitized loans. Essentially, Krugman made the point that our economic policy (at present, and for an unspecified time in the future -- how long is an LTEV?) is being decided by our lenders.
ReplyDeletePerhaps CG can supply the other two, but one should get you started :-)
Interesting point raised in the Sunday Business Post.
ReplyDeleteLet’s say a developer bought a property in 2006 for €130 million, with a loan from AIB for €100 million.
Nama buys the loan for €70 million. The developer defaults and Nama wants to sell the property for €70 million. A prospective buyer is interested and goes to AIB for a loan to buy it. AIB says no, it would only lend €40 million to anyone to buy that property. This puts AIB and the other banks in a strong position to decide how much Nama gets for assets its sells in Ireland.
http://www.sbpost.ie/newsfeatures/treading-on-very-dangerous-ground-44322.html