Thursday, 22 January 2009


Plans to save Britain from recession could end up capsizing the economy, 

FIRST POSTED NOVEMBER 25, 2008

EDITOR'S NOTE: Amid growing concerns about the Labour Government's policy of pumping money into the foundering banking sector, the investment guru Jim Rogers, chairman of Rogers Holdings and famously co-founder with George Soros of the Quantum Fund, declared on Tuesday, January 20 that sterling was "finished".

He advised investors: "I hate to say it, but I would not put any money in the UK."

Speaking to the Financial Times on Wednesday, he did not let up. "I don't think there is a sound UK bank now, at least if there is one I don't know about it," he said. "The City of London is finished, the financial centre of the world is moving east."

Is he right? One man who fears he may be is The First Post's New York financial correspondent, Philip Delves Broughton. He first posted this article nearly two months ago. Nothing that has happened since has caused him to change his mind - which is why we are re-posting his warning today...

HOW QUICKLY could the United Kingdom go bankrupt? Given the speed at which countries and companies have been brought to their knees in recent months, it is no longer hard to envision a scenario in which foreign investors become spooked by the UK's soaring debts and flee.

The hot money, which has propped up the UK economy for the past decade, will seek safety in Switzerland, Japan and the Middle East. And within days, Regent Street will look like downtown Reykjavik.

The bankruptcy scenario goes like this. British output is already falling, and tax revenues along with it. But the government is not merely holding spending steady, but actually increasing it to fund tax cuts and bank bail-outs.

Suddenly the prospect of a £1tr national debt does not seem so distant

This year the government is expected to borrow at least £70bn to add to the £640bn it already owes its creditors. Throw in the hundreds of billions it has made available in credit to banks, and suddenly the prospect of a £1tr national debt does not seem so distant.

Now, if you were a lender looking at the United Kingdom's credit application, how would you feel? Here is a client who spends around 10 per cent more than he earns every year. His income is now set to fall, while his expenses will rise as he has to support ailing family members and pay a mortgage about to reset to a higher interest rate.

He acquired his main asset, his house, with a 95 per cent mortgage and the house has just fallen 15 per cent in value. The client advises that he is going to solve this blip in his personal finances by running up every available line of credit he can and spending. He is already awash in consumer debt and has the lowest savings rate among his neighbours.

Are you ready to lend? Or more inclined to run screaming from the room?

Meanwhile, every other lender around is running around with his hair on fire, not lending to anyone. And the client is also asking to borrow money in a fast-depreciating currency, so the value of his repayments, if you are a foreign investor, is set to fall. Are you ready to lend? Or more inclined to run screaming from the room?

Evidence that investors are doing the latter can be found in