Fine Gael's proposals are light on detail, to say the least. And ref my previous post, someone might want to ask them who would buy all the sovereign debt the country is issuing if they nationalise all the banks.
I still believe NAMA is the least worst option to deal with the bad loans, as the taxpayer will end up paying whatever happens. We seem to be stuck in some kind of perpetual loop of doom where every time we try to deal with the steaming pile of poo, the wailing and gnashing of teeth about why it happened starts again. Limiting the loss to the country from the bad loans should be the number one priority.
What I am worried about(yet not at all surprised), is that the changes to governance and accountability that need to take place in order to limit the likelihood of this happening again, both in the banks and in government (FinReg, Central Bank, Dept of Finance etc.) don't seem to be moving particularly quickly.
But by far and away the worst idea of all is a referendum for NAMA. When half the politicians can't tell the difference between and asset and a liability on a banks balance sheet (the loan is the asset stoopid...) you've got to wonder what hilarity putting it to the people will throw up.
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