British taxpayer to be tied into £50bn bank bailout

Taxpayers will be committed today to providing more than £50 billion to bail out high street banks in an attempt to avert a cataclysmic failure of confidence.

Alistair Darling was due to tell the City in an early morning announcement today that the sum will be available for “investment” in banks that have demanded help from the Government. The drastic rescue move is designed to help to reassure savers and to kickstart the paralysed credit markets by encouraging banks to lend to each other again.

After meeting Mervyn King, the Governor of the Bank of England, Downing Street was forced to make the announcement earlier than it had intended because of fears that a second day of hammering for bank shares had made leading institutions vulnerable. HBOS shares slumped by 42 per cent yesterday, Royal Bank of Scotland was down 39 per cent and Lloyds TSB dived 13 per cent in another torrid day for the banks.

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Posted in * Economics, Politics, * International News & Commentary, Credit Markets, Economy, England / UK, The Credit Freeze Crisis of Fall 2008/The Recession of 2007--

One comment on “British taxpayer to be tied into £50bn bank bailout

  1. Jeffersonian says:

    That Phil Gramm really gets around. Gordy needs to order up a few more tankers of regulation to pour over these markets.