Today it was intended to
rewrite history and reveal to the world how the mind of Karl Marx was mentored
by the Leprechauns, albeit indirectly.
This will wait until tomorrow, socialism giving way to capitalism. But placed together, surely some coincidence,
(again?) in The Telegraph Business Section on Tuesday 12th, were two short
items.
One concerned the ongoing
court case between the old Financial Services Authority and the Tchenquiz
Brothers which I will leave alone and another about the Earl of Home stepping
down from his Chairmanship of Coutts Bank, after 15 years of
"challenging" work.
Coutts main base outside
the UK is now the Cayman Islands with a chain of offices in the richer parts of
the world. Amazingly, these broadly are
the same as those foreign trips that Cameron, Osborne et al having been taking
recently. But Coutts is said to be the
bank of choice for The Royals and other major figures.
During the mid 20th
Century when very high levels of taxation were imposed on the better off etc.
at the very same time many of that class began to export their wealth to what
we now call tax havens. At first the
banks there were relatively limited doing trade with only select customers.
It was signal that in the 1960's
and 70's on UK governments were preaching austerity and how we should all pull
together and how the better off must accept their responsibility. At the same time former colonies, notably The
Bahamas, where Coutts was before the US tax authorities got heavy were deliberately set up not just as tourist places
but as money management and tax avoidance centres.
During the period of
deregulation and encouragement of the financial sector culminating in Labour's
almost incestuous engagement with it this field of activity exploded. It is now not just an aristocratic cum elite
service it allows criminality free scope and the grossest corruption and
malpractice by governments and their agencies national and international.
Historically, if you look
at the picture above and then track around the families at Court close to Queen
Victoria, King Edward VII, King George V and the short reigned King Edward VIII
it is possible to see connections from around 1850 to the present day. They include the Earls of Home.
Which leads us to our
present crop of people at the top and the business of RBS, sometime owner of
Coutts. The question is whether it is
now up for sale and to whom? Clearly
things are not going to remain the same so what happens next? Perhaps the present Earl of Home might be
having a chat with one of RBS's former senior economists. Who was he now? Alex somebody body or other up in Edinburgh?
If you want a corrective
to all the posturing of the politicians and the rest remember that they are all
party to what has been happening and have largely avoided the worst. In a longish but plain spoken post Rowan
Bosworth-Davies yesterday, Wednesday, tells us the story of those
who lost out in the last two decades.
In the meantime Mark
Carney, the new doorman at the Bank of England, believes the way forward is by
increasing the financial sector from four times GDP to nine times. He intends to achieve this by keeping
interest rates at rock bottom for the ordinary man to ramp up the earnings of
the financial sector.
This is all going to end
badly and we will be paying.
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