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August? Bring on September

Alex Brummer on Business

August 18, 2011 09:17

ByCandice Krieger, Candice Krieger

3 min read

T S Elliot described August as the 'cruellest month' and for the financial markets this year, that could not be more true. Going back four decades it was in mid-August 1971 that the then US President Richard Nixon cut the US dollar loose from gold bullion ushering in the modern world of floating exchange rates. In August of 1992 the pound came under enormous selling pressure in the European Monetary System (the precursor of the Eurozone) preparing the way for sterling's expulsion of a few weeks later and the eventual destruction of John Major's government.

Four years ago the money markets froze in August 2007 causing the credit crunch and triggering the collapse of Lehman Brothers a year later as the financial world was brought to shuddering halt. The market catastrophe this summer is the latest instalment in the crisis which began four years ago.

The implosion in the banking and the financial sector was resolved when governments on both sides of the Atlantic stepped in to prop up the banking systems and their economies. The result was a massive transfer of debt from the balance sheets of the private sector to governments. This took two forms. In the first instance almost a trillion pounds in Britain alone was spent holding up the banking system and this was multiplied many times over across the globe. Secondly, when the global economy came to an alarming halt in early 2009, governments poured massive assistance back into their economies. This was done through the automatic stabilisers, the transfer payments in the shape of unemployment benefits and welfare to those who lost their jobs, and direct assistance in the shape of tax breaks (the temporary cut in VAT to 15 per cent), car-scrappage schemes and the like.

In many of the advanced Western economies the measures taken prevented countries, including Britain, falling into a 1930s-style recession and growth returned in 2010. But the crisis of 2007-09 left behind a new crisis of bloated budget deficits and swelling sovereign debt. The first fissures in sovereign debt came to the surface some 16 months ago in Greece, followed by the crises in the other nations on the European periphery, Ireland and Portugal. It is the failure of Europe's authorities to contain the sovereign debt problem on its periphery which has led to the contagion in the past month to Spain, Italy and now even France. If that were not enough President Obama's scuffle with the Republicans on Capitol Hill over American debt limits and budget drained fragile confidence from the US economy, which - despite the rise of Asia - is still the engine of global growth.