Prof
Ref your last post, on the whole banks and fin servs have stayed within the law and regulatory frameworks with a couple of exceptions. Financial services is one of the most heavily regulated industries we have. The credit crunch was not caused by breaking the law, it was caused by excess borrowing/lending, which whilst being irresponsible on the part of both the lenders and borrowers, on the whole was largely legal. Lending self certified mortgages, lending 125% ltv mortgages, securitising loan books and selling them on, all were legal and in fact in some cases (high ltv for example) were activity encouraged by legislators keen to help people get a "foot on the poperty ladder". RBS was legally but badly run, as was Northern Rock, effectively through a mismatch of funding and liabilities. If US house prices has not turned down, there is a good chance that both of those businesses would still be operating today.
And before we hear the PPI scandal etc get raised again, these recent offences have not played a part in the current financial downturn.
Our current slow growth is principally a hangover after the debt fuelled party of the noughties. Collectively as individuals, companies and government we lived beyond our means, convinced that growth in asset prices (otherwise known as inflation) would help us all pay off our liabilities in the end. We were wrong and now collectively we must endure some more restrained spending patterns to re-balance the books.
Some interesting analysis from Jim O'Neill yesterday suggested that UK growth is actually ahead if where we were in previous recessions, principally due to the relatively limited increase in unemployment and that we can expect to see a slow but sustained return to decent growth by end of the year. Might well coincide nicely with a fall in imported inflation. Problem is thats not news as far as the media is concerned and bad news sells much more......