Kosh wrote:
The whole thing has all the makings of an omnishambles.
Watching Newsnight again the prospect of a cash fleeing other currently solvent banks to German banks (say) to the extent they became under threat or do actually go bust thus costing the Eurozone tax payer even more than simply bailing out the Cypriot banks was raised. It was more or less a "So what?" attitude from the Eruozone minister on the program.
He seemed to think that because shareholders and bondholders then large depositors would suffer (in that order) given the Cypriot template seems to now be in place then this meant it was clear banks would be allowed to fail which was in itself a good thing. What he didn't seem to get was peoples fear of losing their money might be the cause of any such bank failures as the Cypriot solution has undermined peoples confidence in all but what they perceive to be the safest banks.
The question of would the Cypriot solution work if a bank as big as RBS failed and what would the consequences be was also not really dealt with.
The Cypriot solution was criticised as being badly handled by one of the guests and a film also highlighted why its a mess in that a cheese farmer/producer had sent a payment for 1.2m Euros to a supplier and neither of them have any idea if 40% of it just vanished. Omnishambles is the right word!