Showing posts with label banks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label banks. Show all posts

Sunday, November 21, 2010



INTERNATIONAL POLITICS:
A BANK STRIKE ?:


Here's an interesting proposition for an event on December 7. It's for an international "bank strike" whereby people withdraw their money from corporate banks in a coordinated fashion on a given day. I presume to redeposit it in institutions such as credit unions or the like. Frankly you have to be doubtful about how far this will fly, but it's still an interesting idea. especially considering how much the banks are responsible for our present economic crisis. Here's the story from the Rage Against The Banks site. See the website for more details and messages in other languages.
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REVOLUTION! ON 12/7 Mass funds withdrawal from Corporate Banks.
Time Tuesday, December 7 · 9:00am - 5:00pm

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Location UK, Worldwide

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Created By Rage Against the Banks

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More Info
On 7th December 2010 you are cordially invited to withdraw any money you may have in any Corporate Bank. This is a worldwide online movement with no leadership.

French: http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=101996426533405
Greek: http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=156793421024126&index=1
German: http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=156793421024126&index=1#!/event.php?eid=171582926191592
International: http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=137793666269183
Italian: http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=165061130188137

Friday, August 20, 2010

Sunday, November 08, 2009


CANADIAN POLITICS/ECONOMICS:
BANK BAILOUTS BY STEALTH:
The following was inspired by a comment on a previous post on this blog concerning the 'OCAP March on the financial district in Toronto'. It actually provoked an intelligent comment whose essence was "when have Canadian banks ever been bailed out ?". I don't have words to express my gratitude when I get a sensible comment from "the other side". Not that all comments from other anarchists are foolish. Platformists and other mutualists like myself have often corrected me in my mistakes, and I am grateful for those corrections. I have even had intelligent commentary from Trotskyists.
Molly is fairly good at 'tracking' (do I have a paranoid attitude ?), and the comment asking about "when" Canadian banks were ever bailed out came from a Royal Bank of Canada employee. I give this guy full marks as a worthy opponent. His comment was brief and to the point and it had validity "on the surface". The Royal Bank, by the way, tracks this blog routinely.
In any case, as I mentioned in my reply to the comment "corporate welfare" is a long established tradition in Canada, and, if you eliminate the subsidies to murder of the US military-industrial complex it is probably a greater factor here than in the USA. As I mentioned in my previous reply the long standing support of "corporate welfare bums" has been an issue that spans decades here in Canada. From left to right I have given the proper references ie The Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, the Frontier Centre for Public Policy and the Fraser Institute. It is not a question of fact. Corporations in Canada do live off government welfare, and commentators from left to right find this both offensive and counterproductive. In other words it's not a matter of opinion. Corporate welfare exists as a real fact, and all sorts of commentators oppose it for various reasons.
Ah, but the "banks" and any "bailouts" you may ask, as the employee of the RBC asked ? Here is an article from the Global Research site way back last January about how Canadian banks were "bailed out by stealth". One may "like" the idea that the Canadian government was proactive in stabilizing our banks, but one cannot deny that this was a "bailout" that was done before a crisis appeared. Intelligent bailouts are still bailouts.How Canadian of us, to do the same thing as the Yankees with less fuss and bother. Read on....
C@C@C@C@C@
Canada's 75 Billion Dollar Bank Bailout
The $64 Billion Federal Budget Deficit is intended to Finance Canada's Chartered Banks
by Michel Chossudovsky
The Conservative government has leaked the details of Tuesday's budget. They have announced a $64 billion deficit.

The Harper government, which has consistently committed itself to a "balanced budget", now claims that deficit spending is required to boost the economy at the height of a major economic recession.

Does this constitute a turnaround in federal government economic policy?

Is the government really committed to running a budget deficit with a view to stimulating demand and reversing the tide of economic decline.

Or is there a hidden agenda? A modest $500 million farm modernization program, a $1 billion fund "to send workers from hard-hit industries back to school", the reduction in the Goods and Services Tax (GST)... The figures do not seem to add up to a staggering $64 billion.
Where is the bulk of the money going? These budget allocations do not explain the dramatic increase in the budget deficit.

Bear in mind that barely a month ago, Finance Minister Jim Flaherty had projected "a $2.3-billion surplus for the current fiscal year" (Edmonton Sun, December 24, 2008) Canada's Bank Bailout

The 64 billion dollar budget deficit should come as no surprise.

It is directly related to a 75 billion dollar bank bailout program for Canada's chartered banks, announced, virtually unnoticed, four days before the October Federal election.

The bank bailout received close to no media coverage; its budgetary implications were not analyzed.

In a statement by Prime Minister Harper on October 10, the bank bailout was casually presented as a commitment by the Federal government to purchase an initial $25 billion in "secure" bank mortgages from the Canadian chartered banks. The transaction would be implemented through Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp:

"Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC) will purchase up to $25 billion in insured mortgage pools as part of the Government of Canada’s plan, announced today, to maintain the availability of longer-term credit in Canada." (Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation Supports Canadian Credit Markets, CHMC Press Release, 10 October 2009)

The decision implies a money transfer into the coffers of Canada's financial institutions. The money is "fungible" and can be used by the banks as they see fit:

"The federal government's [initial] $25-billion takeover of bank-held mortgages to ease a growing credit crunch faced by the country's financial institutions is not a bailout similar to recent moves made in the United States and other Western countries, Conservative Leader Stephen Harper said Friday."This is not a bailout; this is a market transaction that will cost the government nothing," he told reporters at a campaign rally in Brantford, Ont., ahead of Tuesday's federal election."We are not going in and buying bad assets. What we're doing is simply exchanging assets that we already hold the insurance on and the reason we're doing this is to get out in front. The issue here is not protecting the banks." (CBC News October 10, 2008, emphasis added)

The 25 billion dollar allocation was announced four days prior to the elections. Two days following the federal elections, the first mortgage purchase took place leading to an initial cash injection of 5 billion into the coffers of the chartered banks.

Barely a month following the federal election, on November 12 2008, another $50 billion allocation was announced.

It received no news coverage. Moreover, opposition party leaders did not analyze the official statement of the Ministry of Finance. The likely consequences of the Canada bank bailout on the federal fiscal structure were not the object of discussion or political debate.
The text of the official statement reads as follows:
"The Honourable Jim Flaherty, Minister of Finance, today announced the Government will purchase up to an additional $50 billion of insured mortgage pools by the end of the fiscal year as part of its ongoing efforts to maintain the availability of longer-term credit in Canada.This action will increase to $75 billion the maximum value of securities purchased through Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC) under this program."At a time of considerable uncertainty in global financial markets, this action will provide Canada's financial institutions with significant and stable access to longer-term funding," said Minister Flaherty.(The Main Wire, November 12, 2008, emphasis added).

At the height of the election campaign, Prime Minister Harper stated emphatically that: "this is not a bailout... it will cost the government nothing." (CBC News, October 10, 2008).

According to Finance Minister Jim Flaherty: "This program is an efficient, cost-effective and safe way to support lending in Canada that comes at no fiscal cost to taxpayers."(Ibid)
Yet Finance Minister Flaherty contradicts his own statement when he acknowledges that the project will drive up the public debt:

Under the proposal, Ottawa plans to sell a combination of government bonds and other public debt instruments to raise the $25 billion. Then CMHC will ask the banks and other financial institutions to ascertain how much debt they would like to sell to the agency, using a process known as a reverse auction. ...

Flaherty said the action would "make loans and mortgages more available and more affordable for ordinary Canadians and businesses."(Ibid, emphasis added)

The official Ministry of Finance statement confirms that the operation will be financed by the Treasury. Prime Minister Harper claims that "it will cost the government nothing" because the net public debt from an accounting point of view remains the same. While the operation is casually described as a transfer of assets from the banks to the CMHC, what we dealing with is a cash injection equivalent to 4.6% of Canada's Gross Domestic Product (GDP), which is financed through a massive public debt operation. The necessary funds (requiring the issuing of government debt in the form of T-Bills and government bonds) are transferred to the CHMC, which in turn upon completion of the mortgage purchases, channels the funds to the chartered banks:

"The first tranche of the program, for purchases up to $25 billion, was announced on October 10. These purchases will be completed by November 21. Under the initiative announced today, Canadian financial institutions will have access to up to an additional $50 billion of longer-term funding, bringing the total for the IMPP to $75 billion. The extension of the IMPP will be financed through increased issuance of Treasury bills and bonds. The Government will be consulting with market participants about the operational plan in the coming weeks." Ministry of Finance, Government of Canada Announces Additional Support for Canadian Credit Markets 2008-090 (November 12, 2008)
First Tranche: October 10: $25 billion. Already disbursed.
Second Tranche: November 12: $50 billion.

The total is a staggering $75 billion ( which, by the way is very much equivalent on per capita basis to the bailout in tghe USA- Molly )handout to the chartered banks.The initial $25 billion tranche has already been disbursed and nobody in Canada seems to be concerned.
The Government is Financing Its Own Indebtedness
The recipients of the bank bailout are also the creditors of the federal government. The chartered banks are the brokers of the federal public debt. They sell treasury bills and government bonds on behalf of the government. They also hold a portion of the public debt..
In a bitter irony, the banks lend money to the federal government to finance the bailout, and with the money raised through the sale of government bonds and T-Bills, the government finances, via the CHMC, the bank bailout. It is a circular process. The banks are the recipients of the bailout as well as the creditors of the State. The federal government is in a sense financing its own indebtedness.

While the Canadian bailout procedures differ from those of the US Treasury under the Troubled Assets Relief Program (TARP), they essentially serve the same purpose. Both programs contribute to bank centralization and the concentration of financial wealth.

Under TARP, some 700 billion dollars bailout money was allocated to major Wall Street banks. Canada's population is slightly less than 11 percent of that of the US. The numbers are consistent. The 75 billion dollar Canadian bailout is slightly less (numerically US dollar for Can dollar) than 11 percent of the US 700 billion bailout under TARP.
No Parliamentary Debate
The $700 billion US bank bailout under the Troubled Assets Relief Program, was the object of debate and legislation in the US Congress.

In contrast, in Canada, the granting of 75 billion dollars to Canada's chartered banks was implemented at the height of an election campaign, without duly informing the Canadian public.
Canada's media and financial press bears a responsibility in this regard. The matter was barely mentioned. It passed virtually unnoticed a few days before a federal election.

Media coverage was minimal. There was no parliamentary debate. No discussion, no debate as one would have expected from the opposition parties at the height of an election campaign as well as in its aftermath.

Nobody seemed to have noticed. Most Canadians do not know that there was a 75 billion dollar bailout of Canada's financial institutions.

The decision was casually presented as an effort "to ease the credit crunch" and encourage Canadian banks "to loosen their purse strings and extend more lending to businesses and consumers."

The impact, however, is likely to result in exactly the opposite: the centralization and concentration of financial wealth to the detriment of the real economy..
Mergers and Acquisitions
We are not dealing with a Keynesian style deficit, which stimulates investment and consumer demand, leading to an expansion of production and employment.

While, the bank bailout is a component of government expenditure, it does not constitute a positive spending injection into the real economy.

Quite the opposite. The bailout is a handout to the banks. It contributes to financing the restructuring of the banking system leading to a massive concentration of wealth and centralization of banking power.

The bailout money will be used by Canada's chartered banks to consolidate their position as well as finance the acquisition of several "troubled" financial institutions in the US. (See text box below)
The Destabilization of the Federal Fiscal Structure
This is the most serious public debt crisis in Canadian history.The bank bailout potentially destabilizes the federal fiscal structure. It leads to a spiraling budget deficit, which must be financed at tax payers expense. The entire structure of public spending is affected including federal-provincial transfers. The (federal) public debt is slated to increase by 14 % over a two year period. The provincial debts are also likely to increase dramatically.

The 75 billion dollar bailout is to be partially financed by increasing the public debt.

The Minister of Finance has intimated that further measures are envisaged "to bolster the availability of credit" with the government "injecting capital into banks if necessary." (Bloomberg, January 23, 2009) It is worth noting that in addition to the $75 billion, the government has pledged "to backstop more than $200 billion in interbank lending so banks can boost their lending capacity." (Toronto Star, December 13, 2009). The implications of this decision remain to be carefully analysed. What we can expect is a combination of budgetary compressions coupled with an increase of the public debt. Most categories of federal expenditure (excluding defense) are likely to be affected.

The federal fiscal structure is in jeopardy. The budget deficit finances the bank bailout.
What is likely to occur are more government "handouts" to banks and corporations coupled with a massive austerity program and a spiraling public debt.

The size of the public debt is also affected by the economic crisis. Company layoffs and bankruptcies seriously affect the revenues of the State. Unemployed people and bankrupt companies do not pay taxes. The increase in unemployment and the contraction in salaried earnings will backlash on tax revenues, which in turn contributes to exacerbating the fiscal crisis both at the federal and provincial levels.

Wednesday, October 07, 2009


AMERICAN POLITICS:
STOP THE KEN LEWIS GOLDEN HANDSHAKE:
Some of us can only dream of a just a little goodby present after screwing things up. ken Lewis of the Bank of America will get a $53.3 million pension for his role in producing the present financial crisis. The following appeal from the Service Employees International Union asks you to add your voice against this atrocity.
APAPAPAPAPAPAP
Stop the Ken Lewis Bailout:‏
Ken Lewis is on his way out at Bank of America. But not without one more parting gift from all of us.

Despite helping to drive us into one of the worst financial meltdowns in history, it's been revealed that Bank of America plans to send Ken Lewis out the door with a $53.3 million pension on top of the hundreds of millions he's already made during his failed tenure as CEO.
We're the ones paying billions in tax dollars to bail out Bank of America for the mistakes Ken Lewis made. We shouldn't let him take one more penny of our hard-earned money.


The Obama administration has appointed a 'pay czar,' Kenneth Feinberg, to make sure our tax dollars aren't being used to pay outrageous earnings to bank CEOs.
Will you tell the pay czar to stop payment on the Ken Lewis bailout? http://seiu.org/stoppayment

SEIU Secretary Treasurer Anna Burger will be delivering a letter to Mr. Feinberg, asking him to withhold Lewis' absurd compensation until Bank of America agrees to stop hurting our communities with reckless financial practices. But we want you, as a taxpayer, to sign on to the letter before we deliver it to Mr. Feinberg: http://seiu.org/stoppayment

The changes we're asking for are simple - and they're necessary to stop greedy banks from driving us toward another financial meltdown. Help make sure Ken Lewis doesn't get another dime of our money until Bank of America cleans up its act.
Thanks,
John VanDeventer
SEIU.org
P.S. It's not just Ken Lewis. CEOs at all the major banks are continuing to rake in millions, but they've done nothing to fix the problems that got us into this mess. Help us put them all on notice by signing the letter to pay czar Kenneth Feinberg.
MOLLY NOTES
The actions of CEO Ken Lewis are actually quite typical, and they repeprsesent an huge undergound iceberg of managerial control in presumably 'capitalist' companies where the managers can undercut both the workers and the stockholders, who are too dispersed to control the managers. Win or loose in some supposedly 'competitive' system where the rules are usually jeririgged to produce less competition rather than more, the managers exit the companies they have ruined with extraordinarily high payment for 'failure'. Nothing could be so demonstrative of how far the USA is aways from an actual "free market" (assuming such a thing could work. The "socialism" that right wing Americans like to scream about has been in place for many decades now. Its purpose is to provide social security 'on a grant scale' to those who have wealth in society while putting every roadblock in the path of the poor and working classes.
Here's the letter from the SEIU to Obama "pay czar" asking him to block Ken Lewis' bailout, You can send the following letter via THIS LINK. Not that the Obama administration is very much adverse to making awards for failure, but the more public protest the less than can carrying out this looting of the public treasury.
Here's the protest letter
ALALALALALALAL
Dear Mr. Feinberg:
On behalf of the 2.1 million members of the Service Employees International Union (SEIU), I ask that you take immediate action on the multimillion-dollar retirement package being offered to one of the chief architects of the most severe economic crisis since the Great Depression, Bank of America CEO Ken Lewis.
News reports indicate that Mr. Lewis will be leaving the bank with $126 million—including a $53.3 million pension. We do not yet know what kind of additional bonus money will be paid out upon Lewis’ departure.
At the same time, SEIU members and Americans across the country continue to lose their homes, their jobs and their retirement savings.
Bank of America, under the management of Lewis, has restricted lending to small businesses and consumers, continues to rake in billions in fees and high interest charges from their customers, and has been slow to modify mortgages and save homeowners from foreclosure. Shareholders have seen the value of their holdings plummet and Americans have seen their pensions and 401(k)s evaporate.
The housing crisis created by Bank of America and other banks has created severe budget crises for state and local governments—and even though they continue to receive taxpayer support, Bank of America and other large banks’ lending decisions have forced states and cities to lay-off workers and cut critical public services.
Personal bankers, tellers, credit card call center workers, and other frontline Bank of America workers have revealed to the press compensation and quotas systems built around selling products consumers do not need or cannot afford. These quotas incentivized workers them to engage in the predatory practices that led to the mortgage crisis and the overabundance of credit card debt.
In addition, Bank of America continues to spend millions lobbying against pro-working family legislation. Together, Bank of America and Merrill Lynch spent more than $12 million on lobbying in 2008. Just three days after receiving $25 billion in federal bailout funds, Bank of America held a conference call with clients to organize opposition to the Employee Free Choice Act and raise funds for those efforts. The bank opposes President Obama's financial reform efforts and lobbied against bills, such as the Credit Cardholders Bill of Rights and the Foreclosure Prevention Act of 2008.
Beyond the damage done to our economy, Bank of America and Ken Lewis continue to face investigations and potential legal action for misleading shareholders about commitments to pay Merrill Lynch executives up to $5.8 billion in bonuses during Bank of America’s purchase of Merrill last year. Shareholders have already soundly rejected the failed practices of Lewis. In an unprecedented show of no confidence earlier this year, shareholders ousted Lewis as Chair of the Board. The action followed demands of nearly 100,000 taxpayers from across the country for shareholders to fire Lewis.
Taxpayers have already provided nearly $200 billion in bailouts and backstops to Bank of America. This enormous public investment entitles taxpayers to have a say in the bank’s executive compensation practices.
We request that Ken Lewis and other executives at banks supported by taxpayer dollars be prevented from receiving any retirement or severance package until the banks commit to:
* Stopping foreclosures to save Americans’ homes and state and local budgets;
* Providing the same affordable loans to state and local governments that the banks receive from the federal government;
* Restoring small business lending to save jobs and tax revenue;
* Lowering interest rates on consumer credit cards and stopping charging abusive overdraft fees that take billions out of consumers’ pockets; and
* Allowing employees to negotiate compensation practices so they are no longer directly tied to quotas and unreasonable sales goals, targeting consumers with unnecessary or harmful products, and amassing consumer debt.
According to a report released by SEIU[1], once all crisis-related programs are factored, taxpayers could be on the hook for up to $17.8 trillion to rescue the big banks. A year has passed since our economic crash and since then, banks have refused to aid in the recovery of our economy. Instead, they continue to engage in the same failed policies that created the crisis and engorge themselves with profits and bonuses.
The American people are counting on you to reform the reckless culture of Wall Street that allows bank executives to drive our economy into the ground and walk away with millions. Immediate action by your office will set a precedent that no bank executive will receive compensation packages until they put policies in place to create jobs, allow homeowners to retain their homes and support state and local governments.
Sincerely,
Anna Burger
International Secretary-Treasurer
Service Employees International Union
[your name]
[1] The Trillion Dollar Bank Job: How Wall Street and the Big Banks Are Holding Up America’s Economic Recovery, SEIU, September 2009.

Thursday, October 01, 2009


CANADIAN LABOUR-TORONTO/OTTAWA:
SUPPORT NORTEL WORKERS AND PENSIONERS:
The following call for two upcoming demonstrations is from the website of the Canadian Auto Workers. As in most bankruptcies in our society it is the workers who get the short end of the stick. Molly urges her readers to go to the CAW website where there is wealth of information about what is happening around the closing down of Nortel. As that website says, "Bankruptcy law is designed to protect the banking and money lending system; it is not designed to protect those who have given their lives to the service of a company. Those few changes that have been made to better protect working people and those that have retired from work, have come at the insistance of unions, including the CAW."
CLCLCLCLCLCLCLCL
Support the Nortel Workers and Pensioners Rallies:
Nortel Networks initiated financial restructuring in Canada under the Companies Creditors Arrangement Act (CCAA) earlier this year. As a result, the company stopped paying severance, transition allowances and deferred wages to all former employees and retirees.




The CAW is joining with the Nortel Retirees and former employee Protection Canada (NRPC) to demand that both the federal and provincial government ensure that Nortel workers get the benefits they were promised and not to allow a wind-up of the Nortel pension fund.




CAW members, Nortel retirees and supporters will be gathering for two rallies, demanding that both levels of government guarantee pensions and other promised benefits:




Wednesday, October 7 at 12 noon at Queen's Park in Toronto and Wednesday, October 21 at 12 noon on Parliament Hill.




"Governments in the U.S. and U.K. have acted on behalf of the Nortel workers in their countries, why is the Canadian government ignoring this potential tragedy," says CAW President Ken Lewenza.




Check the CAW website at www.caw.ca/en/5511 for more information or contact CAW Retired Workers Director Jenny Ahn at: 1-800-268-5763

Sunday, February 08, 2009


INTERNATIONAL POLITICS:
MUTUALIZE THE BANKS ?-YES!:
A tip of the Molly hat to Larry Gambone of the Porkupine Blog for bring this to my attention. It seems that in Britain there is a move afoot to "remutualize" at least two of the failed banks. To say the least this is a positive development. Mutuals, known in this country as credit unions, are naturally more cautious than the free wheeling banks that led the world into the present economic crisis. They provide a natural barrier against the sort of speculation whose results we are seeing today. In addition, and perhaps most importantly, they provide a non-governmental source of credit that would be available to the many (and probably many more in the future) enterprises that are presently in dispute, often with workers' occupations of the facilities. Mutuals/credit unions could be a source of credit for such enterprises if their workers wish to turn them into producers' cooperatives. They would provide a third alternative different from either waiting for a private "white knight" or calling for nationalization of the workplace in question. The agreements taken up with such mutuals leave the actual workplace free to develop true workers' self-management, something that neither private buyouts nor nationalization does.
Yes, the British initiative is small, but I hope it comes about and that it is imitated on a larger scale worldwide. Here's the news from the pages of the British newspaper The Guardian.
...........................

Turn failed banks back into mutuals, Labour told:
Rock and B&B should be restored to savers
Pressure is mounting for the government to explore ways to remutualise Northern Rock and Bradford & Bingley, nationalised after the shares crashed amid fears that they could collapse amid the world financial crisis. Both companies were mutuals before becoming stockmarket-listed banks in the 1990s.

Labour MPs are pushing for the government to expand the role of mutuals, which are owned by depositors and borrowers. They do not have shareholders who may be more interested in diverting profit to bolster dividends than getting customers a better deal.

Mutually owned building societies are widely viewed as more cautious than banks, which have been accused of irresponsible lending during the boom. Societies are barred from funding more than half their mortgages from the wholesale money markets, which have frozen up in the wake of the credit crunch.

One option would be to remutualise Northern Rock and B&B, both of which have been rescued by the taxpayer at a huge cost, although part of B&B was acquired by Spanish bank Santander. The principle of remutualisation is supported by the Co-operative party which sponsors 29 Labour MPs, including schools secretary Ed Balls.

The Co-op's general secretary Michael Stephenson said: "The government could consolidate Northern Rock and its holding into one institution; when all debts are paid back, the institution could be converted into a building society. Alternatively, government could give existing financial mutuals (such as Nationwide) the right of first refusal when it decides to put the institutions it nationalised up for sale."

John McFall, Labour chairman of the Treasury select committee and a Co-op sponsored MP, says: "If ever there was a time for an expanded mutual sector, it's now. We desperately need to restore faith in financial services in this country." Although he stopped short of calling for a firm commitment to remutualise the Rock and B&B, he told the Observer that the idea was "a fertile area for debate".

He was backed by Mark Lazarowicz, Labour MP for Edinburgh North and Leith, who says: "This is an issue that is worth airing at a time when confidence in the banks is at an all-time low."
Martin Weale, director of the National Institute of Social and Economic Research, said remutualising Northern Rock and B&B could be a relatively simple, albeit lengthy, process with money owed to the taxpayer repaid by borrowers who redeem their debts over time. New "membership" shares could be issued to depositor/members, he said.

It emerged this weekend that the Building Societies Association is to commission academic research into how the mutual sector could be expanded in Britain, after banks that ditched mutuality in favour of plc status have either been nationalised or taken over in "mercy killings" by rival institutions. They include HBOS, which has been merged with Lloyds TSB, and Alliance & Leicester, which was bought by Santander.

Stephenson said: "When the last Conservative government encouraged building societies to demutualise, it plundered generations of assets from mutual societies, replacing prudent mortgage providers with some of the worst culprits of casino capitalism."