
The nationals this morning have launched into Alstait Darling's handling of the Nothern Rock crisis.
The Mail,Telegraph and Times telling us how the bank is frittering away tax payers money
The Sun's leader talks of the
fiasco is fast becoming Labour’s “Black Wednesday.”
The difference is that the 1992 devaluation crisis freed Britain from the euro and paved the way for a record 15 years of growth.
The £3.3bn price tag then was peanuts compared with the tens of billions taxpayers stand to lose today — with nothing in return.
So far it’s £24bn — £900 for every single taxpayer.
Darling caught between a rock and a hard place says the Telegraph
There was a welcome, if rare, sighting of the Chancellor of the Exchequer at the Dispatch Box yesterday. His near-invisibility in recent weeks is a little puzzling, given that he is presiding over the gravest financial crisis since our ejection from the exchange rate mechanism on Black Wednesday, 15 years ago.
Vince Cable who is fast gaining a reputation over the crisis writes in the Guardian that
The reputation for economic competence was hard won. It is now being lost, very fast. The immediate cause is Northern Rock. I will not rehearse again the arguments about who said and did what to whom and who was to blame for the original crisis. But in extending a loan to the mortgage bank, currently £24bn in addition to the less controversial £18bn deposit guarantees, a series of disastrous errors have been made.
Let the City solve its own problems says the Mail leader reminding us that
When times are good, a major British bank can make profits of over £1million per hour, all year round. It's not unusual for employees to pick up Christmas bonuses worth 50 or even 100 times the average worker's total annual earnings.
So it continues
Why, though, should taxpayers be expected to shield hugely profitable banks when times are uncertain in the City?
Avoid this meltdown says the Mirror
The health of the British economy is tied up with the future of Northern Rock.
Chancellor Alistair Darling holds in his hands our jobs and incomes - plus the mortgages of millions of people.
It's easy for Tory shadow George Osborne to shout from the sidelines but he's failed to come up with a solution.
What we need are cool decisions to avoid an economic meltdown
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