Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Fine Gael calls for creation of 'good banks' with clean balance sheets into which the taxpayers' recapitalisation would go.

Acccording to FG the Government's recapitalisation plans may leave taxpayers' dangerously exposed to massive bad debts and the Government should urgently consider other options, including the creation of brand new 'good banks' with clean balance sheets.

Fine Gael Deputy Leader & Finance Spokesman Richard Bruton TD said today (Monday).
"It is time to look at other alternatives to the present proposal for recapitalisation.
"Fine Gael has huge concerns that the taxpayer is being asked to put money into banks without knowing the full extent of the hole in their balance sheet. There is a real risk that the only result will be to allow the existing banks to nurse along their dodgy property lending while continuing to starve viable businesses of access to the credit they so badly need.
"The taxpayers' interest is to kick-start new lending. It is not to protect the existing banks or those who knowingly took on the risk of funding their impaired lending policies.
"It is now time to look at a different model, which would create 'good banks' with clean balance sheets into which the taxpayers' recapitalisation would go.

"This would involve separating from within each bank a new bank which would hold all the state guaranteed deposits and which would buy those parts of the loan book such as residential mortgage loans and business overdrafts which can be easily valued from the existing parent bank. This would constitute a new good bank with a clean balance sheet. Its capital base would be provided by the taxpayers' recapitalisation, hopefully with other private capital, and some small shareholding could be given to the existing shareholders. These new banks would then be well capitalised with a clean balance sheet and fully open to resume lending.

"A legacy bank would be left behind in each case which would no longer engage in any lending. Its role would be to manage the remainder of the loan book and recoup maximum value from it over time. It would be managed entirely in the interest of the existing capital owners and non-guaranteed creditors. Fine Gael believes that this alternative model deserves serious assessment and could offer a much better use of scarce taxpayers' resources."

1 comment:

rainywalker said...

The US government tried this back in Oct 2008 and it did nothing and now they can't account for who got the trillion dollars and 79 billion is missing. This Stimulus bill is not going to put anyone to work. It didn't for Hoover or FDR and it wont for Obama. Besides there are few to no jobs in the bill anyway. It's the biggest social grab since 1938 and will not get Americans to purchase anything to get the economy moving.
Perhaps someone will oversee your bank problems and keep track of where the money goes.