Bank regulation: Can we trust the Vickers Report?

In this response to the Vickers report, financial experts Tim Ambler and Miles Saltiel argue that the report's findings fail to address the root causes of the financial crisis and would create another layer of bureaucracy. Instead, the government should allow the creation of new "Trust Banks" that would be safely run, reduce arguments for protection of riskier banks, and introduce new competition to the high street.

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Hanging London out to dry: The impact of an EU Financial Transaction Tax

In a follow up his last report on the Tobin Tax, Adam Baldwin assesses the impact of the European Commission's Financial Transaction Tax on Britain. He draws on the EC's impact assessment and independent research and concludes that it would wipe out derivatives trading in the City, hurt economic growth and increase market volatility.

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The Condensed Wealth of Nations

Adam Smith’s The Wealth of Nations is one of the most important books ever written. Smith recognised that economic specialization and cooperation was the key to improving living standards. He shattered old ways of thinking about trade, commerce and public policy, and led to the foundation of a new field of study: economics. And yet, his book is rarely read today. It is written in a dense and archaic style that is inaccessible to many modern readers. The Condensed Wealth of Nations condenses Smith’s work and explains the key concepts in The Wealth of Nations clearly. It is accessible and readable to any intelligent layman. This book also contains a primer on The Theory of Moral Sentiments, Adam Smith’s other great work that explores the nature of ethics. You can buy your copy here!

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How Basel III threatens small businesses

  • Basel III requires an increase in the size of banks' equity relative to their loans and a more formal assessment of risk. It is built on the same foundations as Basel I and II. The reasons why those initiatives failed may well apply also to Basel III, not least because the adjusment of assets for risk cannot be conducted with any certainty.
  • Soverign debts once considered safe are not necessarily safe any longer.
  • The rules agreed in September 2010 are to be phased in between 2014 and 2019 to give banks time to adjust. Most of the capital adjustment will come from banks lending less but better and with increased margins - that is, higher interest rates to customers.
  • Big companies will be able to shop around within the competitive international markets. However, in a situation where five big banks dominate the UK market, Britain's smal and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) will be hit both by the reduced aviailability of loans and by higher interest rates.
  • Since SMEs drive the UK economy, the consequence of Basel III is negative for the UK.

Read the full briefing paper here.