Tuesday 16 September 2008

Bank of England governor - No pain, no gain.

The Bank of England governor, Mervyn King, has not said the phrase "no pain, no gain" but he is pretty adamant in his opposition to any plans by the UK government to prop up the mortgage market. I read in moneymarketing.co.uk one description of Mr King, which said the Aston Villa fan
was a purist and was not a pragmatic economist.
Some parts of the mortgage market continues to operate. If you are creditworthy, then you will still receive credit. However, it looks like there are real problems at the first-time buyer level, which obviously hits chains.
In recent memory building societies ran a cartel while rationing housing loans. Such things were dismantled in the Thatcherite revolution but remarkably banks and building socities can still move together in the United Kingdom. They all seemed to raise their required deposits at the same time and at the same level. Or was that my mistaken impression?
If the Bank of England governor has his way, there will probably be a slow recovery.
UK Chancellor Alistair Darling wants any recovery to be quicker and it will be interesting to see how far he ignores Mr King.
www.searchifa.co.uk

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