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Autor Tema: RESCATE DE ESPAÑA: LA TRAVESIA DEL DESIERTO HA COMENZADO (VII)  (Leído 851968 veces)

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SafeAsHouses

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Re:RESCATE DE ESPAÑA: LA TRAVESIA DEL DESIERTO HA COMENZADO (VII)
« Respuesta #1605 en: Diciembre 07, 2012, 10:23:35 am »
En El Pais, debajo del titular "Guindos frena el peso politico de las Cajas pero se sigue enfrentando a la UE" encontrareis estos tres links. Supongo que el editor no se ha dado cuenta de lo graciosa que es una lista asi. O es un cachondo...

"El Gobierno se enfrenta a Bruselas por la reforma de las cajas
España pedirá otros 1.500 millones para las cajas
El fondo de rescate emite 39.468 millones de deuda para España"

Si te enfrentas a alguien al mismo tiempo que quieres que te preste mas pasta... las opciones son

a) Achantas, y que te den el dinero,

b) Sigues murmurando entre dientes un ratito. Probablemente te van a dar el dinero, y seguramente te van a dar unas hostias,

c) Te creces ante el castigo, a lo Wert/PabloRomeros. Te llevas las hostias. Y con mucha suerte el dinero.

Your Choice, Mr Windows

« última modificación: Diciembre 07, 2012, 10:28:31 am por SafeAsHouses »

Xoshe

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Re:RESCATE DE ESPAÑA: LA TRAVESIA DEL DESIERTO HA COMENZADO (VII)
« Respuesta #1606 en: Diciembre 07, 2012, 10:34:15 am »
Continua mi incredulidad ante lo que veo. Me recuerda a los independentistas catalanes diciendo que con Estado propio todo seguirá igual y entrarán en la UE sin problemas ni quebrantos. A ver si se enteran de una vez y dejan de hacer el ridículo. Se dice en inglés. "Who pays the bagpiper picks the music". NO se puede engañar a quien te da el dinero. Uno. Dos, en quince años esto no remonta a precios considerados "normales" por la casta. Los fundamentales de renta, demografía y base inmobiliaria son tan evidentes que no necesitan ni comentarse. Yo comprendo que no hay nada más agarrado que la esperanza de un pobre pero lo que hemos conocido hasta ahora ha terminado. El problema es con qué sustituirlo porque España, querida y pobre, no sabe hacer otra cosa sino sacar dinero de engañar a sus propios descendientes. Tres son los componentes de la demanda full de esta gentuza. Uno, la recalificación inmobiliaria. Otro el sector público parasitario (se ingresa porque si, se cobra al margen del Derecho Administrativo) y el tercero el porcentaje sobre obras públicas, razón por la que antes se enladrilla Pirichimolo del Arzobispo que informatiza la Justicia (informatizada ya en lo privado por Registradores y Notarios desde hace décadas). Obviamente si falla la recalificación y no hay dinero para obra pública ( a causa del déficit) la Administración no nuclear se va al carajo. En eso estamos. El caso catalán es paradigmático. Desesperados como están porque no les llega, NHD, recurren al enemigo exterior. Pero ni siquiera con diez mil millones más al año tienen sus males arreglo. El único arreglo es meter la tijera en la selva oscura del despelote adminstrativo. Y no quieren. Pero el congeladurismo talibán que padecemos es de imposible cumplimiento. Son los espasmos del decapitado. Preparémonos para el espectáculo con un saco de palomitas y, preferiblemente, desde el extranjero.

dmar

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Re:RESCATE DE ESPAÑA: LA TRAVESIA DEL DESIERTO HA COMENZADO (VII)
« Respuesta #1607 en: Diciembre 07, 2012, 12:43:03 pm »
Continua mi incredulidad ante lo que veo. Me recuerda a los independentistas catalanes diciendo que con Estado propio todo seguirá igual y entrarán en la UE sin problemas ni quebrantos. A ver si se enteran de una vez y dejan de hacer el ridículo. Se dice en inglés. "Who pays the bagpiper picks the music". NO se puede engañar a quien te da el dinero. Uno. Dos, en quince años esto no remonta a precios considerados "normales" por la casta. Los fundamentales de renta, demografía y base inmobiliaria son tan evidentes que no necesitan ni comentarse. Yo comprendo que no hay nada más agarrado que la esperanza de un pobre pero lo que hemos conocido hasta ahora ha terminado. El problema es con qué sustituirlo porque España, querida y pobre, no sabe hacer otra cosa sino sacar dinero de engañar a sus propios descendientes. Tres son los componentes de la demanda full de esta gentuza. Uno, la recalificación inmobiliaria. Otro el sector público parasitario (se ingresa porque si, se cobra al margen del Derecho Administrativo) y el tercero el porcentaje sobre obras públicas, razón por la que antes se enladrilla Pirichimolo del Arzobispo que informatiza la Justicia (informatizada ya en lo privado por Registradores y Notarios desde hace décadas). Obviamente si falla la recalificación y no hay dinero para obra pública ( a causa del déficit) la Administración no nuclear se va al carajo. En eso estamos. El caso catalán es paradigmático. Desesperados como están porque no les llega, NHD, recurren al enemigo exterior. Pero ni siquiera con diez mil millones más al año tienen sus males arreglo. El único arreglo es meter la tijera en la selva oscura del despelote adminstrativo. Y no quieren. Pero el congeladurismo talibán que padecemos es de imposible cumplimiento. Son los espasmos del decapitado. Preparémonos para el espectáculo con un saco de palomitas y, preferiblemente, desde el extranjero.


Que no, hombre, que no...  Que en Ejpaña semos ejpeciales... no, ¡semos cojonudoh!

Hay que haber hablado con mucha gente de la "derecha común" para entender el "excepcionalismo cañí" o hidalguía.

Pero bueno, piense en el Sr. Ministro de cultura:

El Fary - Torito Guapo Small | Large


¿Hay cultura más representativa de España que esta?  :roto2:

PD: ¿Se imaginan si los de la marea verde le cantasen esto a Wert cada vez que apareciese en público?  ¡Toma desobediencia civil!

Currobena

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Re:RESCATE DE ESPAÑA: LA TRAVESIA DEL DESIERTO HA COMENZADO (VII)
« Respuesta #1608 en: Diciembre 07, 2012, 13:42:18 pm »
Para algunas cosas aún hay dinero:

Citar
Ana Botella dobla el gasto en publicidad institucional del Ayuntamiento de Madrid  07 Viernes dic 2012
   Posted  by Eva Belmonte in presupuestos      
 Dejar un comentario
     
  • El presupuesto para la inserción de anuncios en 2013 es de diez millones
  • En 2011, se contrató el mismo servicio por unos seis millones y medio
Los presupuestos del Ayuntamiento de Madrid para 2012 y 2013 incluyen recortes millonarios y un aumentos generalizado de tasas para hacer frente al déficit. En medio del ‘tijeretazo’, el presupuesto para la publicación de publicidad institucional pasa de seis millones y medio a más de diez millones de euros.
Tal y como publica hoy el BOE, el ayuntamiento que dirige Ana Botella ha formalizado la  contratación de dos empresas (Inteligencia y Media e Irismedia) para la “mediación, inserción y asesoramiento de la difusión de la publicidad institucional declarada de gestión centralizada” (entendemos que a este gasto, pues, habría que sumarle la no-centralizada). En total, diez millones de euros  divididos en cuatro lotes, para la difusión de la publicidad institucional durante 2013 en todo tipo de medios. En 2011, el consistorio licitó un servicio idéntico, pero el presupuesto entonces era mucho más reducido: seis millones y medio de euros.
Entre los pliegos de la oferta de licitación cuya formalización se ha publicado hoy encontramos los requisitos, por ejemplo, que deben cumplir los medios digitales que acojan publicidad destinada a los distritos dentro de lo que el ayuntamiento denomina lote 1: ‘micromedios’. Las publicaciones deberán incluir un alto porcentaje de información sobre los barrios a los que se dirija la campaña y, además, “se seleccionarán los sites priorizando aquellos que maximicen la afinidad”.
Buenos días.


http://elboenuestrodecadadia.com/2012/12/07/ana-botella-dobla-el-gasto-en-publicidad-institucional-del-ayuntamiento-de-madrid/
Estoy cansado de darme con la pared y cada vez me queda menos tiempo...

Maple Leaf

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Re:RESCATE DE ESPAÑA: LA TRAVESIA DEL DESIERTO HA COMENZADO (VII)
« Respuesta #1609 en: Diciembre 07, 2012, 13:47:58 pm »
La manipulación y el apagón informativo es total en los medios españoles. Lo que diga "El Confidencial" es para sostenerlo con pinzas. Desde los medios centroeuropeos no parece que la información sobre lo que sucede entre España y la UE sea mas clara.

La realidad es que seguimos sin rescate, con la UE tomándose su tiempo, sin una oposición clara y contundente a los desmanes de la castuza de delincuentes habituales al mando, mas bien palmaditas en la espalda por las reformas hechas y pidiendo mas, mientras millones de personas están al límite.

No ha cambiado nada, un dia más, una semana más, un mes más, un año más.
« última modificación: Diciembre 07, 2012, 13:57:19 pm por Maple Leaf »

tomasjos

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Re:RESCATE DE ESPAÑA: LA TRAVESIA DEL DESIERTO HA COMENZADO (VII)
« Respuesta #1610 en: Diciembre 07, 2012, 14:07:28 pm »
Maple, el rescate UE traería más miseria a esos mismos millones de españoles y a unos cuantos más, vía más recortes a la población, a los empleados públicos, a los parados, a los trabajadores del sector privado, etc.... Porque no se olvide que la manera de implementar los recortes la decide la Castuza. Así que, para que nos puteen aun más, rescate no gracias. Si estamos al límite ahora, imagínese en ese caso.

Salvo que lo que queramos es el CPM y que la situación explote vía revolución.
La función de los más capaces en una sociedad humana medianamente sana es cuidar y proteger a aquellos menos capaces, no aprovecharse de ellos.

Y a propósito del tema, sostengo firmemente que la Anglosfera debe ser destruida.

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Re:RESCATE DE ESPAÑA: LA TRAVESIA DEL DESIERTO HA COMENZADO (VII)
« Respuesta #1611 en: Diciembre 07, 2012, 14:31:25 pm »
El rescate significa dinero a cambio de poder. Te vas, sin hacer mucho ruido, para que me ponga yo al mando. De por si no se traduce en mas miseria.

Nos queda mucho por desmantelar, lo que se traducirá en dolor para muchos. La UE pide el necesario AUTONOMIZAZO, al que se opone la castuza. Para sembrar, primero hay que arar el terreno y deshacerse de las malas hierbas, es comprensible, pero ¿donde está la UE mientras nos saquea la castuza, se reparten los restos del Estado y nos llevan de vuelta a la dictadura?

¿Qué cabronada es esa de dejar a los desgraciados que se han comido la burbuja tambien sin pensiones?

¿Qué mierda es esa de dar un PER europeo a los parados para mantener la paz social, cuando lo que toca es ver a los responsables de la burbuja responder de sus actos?

¿Qué mierda es esa de dar dinero a la castuza cuando los precios inmobiliarios siguen disparatados?
« última modificación: Diciembre 07, 2012, 15:11:20 pm por Maple Leaf »

Xoshe

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Re:RESCATE DE ESPAÑA: LA TRAVESIA DEL DESIERTO HA COMENZADO (VII)
« Respuesta #1612 en: Diciembre 07, 2012, 14:55:58 pm »
El speech de Haldane está aquí. Viene a decir que el modelo de riesgo adoptado por la industria financiera no es válido porque los parámetros usados no son los correctos. El speech es del 2009 y en ese momento Haldane era Director de Estabilidad Financiera del Banco de Inglaterra. Tenéis que hacer click donde se indica.
http://www.centralbanking.com/central-banking/speech/2183080/boe-s-haldane-criticises-financial-models

Xoshe

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Re:RESCATE DE ESPAÑA: LA TRAVESIA DEL DESIERTO HA COMENZADO (VII)
« Respuesta #1613 en: Diciembre 07, 2012, 15:04:49 pm »
Con hipervínculo NO funciona.
Lo pongo yo sin imágenes e invito a que los de verdad interesados entréis en el link directamente y hagáis click. Se puede y yo lo he hecho antes. No sé como es que ahora no va.
Si hay algún voluntario capaz de descifrar un pdf y postearlo se lo puedo mandar por email. Son 23 páginas y he de mandarlo en dos cachos.
Ahí va el primero.
----------------
WHY BANKS FAILED THE STRESS TEST
Andrew G Haldane*
Executive Director for Financial Stability Bank of England
13 February 2009
The basis for a speech given at the Marcus-Evans Conference on Stress-Testing, 9-10 February 2009
* I would like to thank Geoff Coppins, Harry Goodacre, Nigel Jenkinson, Salina Ladha, Iman van Leyveld, Jack McKeown, Joe Noss, Adrian Penalver, Nick Vause and Matthew Willison for contributions and comments.
WHY BANKS FAILED THE STRESS TEST
By any historical standard, the financial crisis of the past 18 months has been extraordinary. Some have suggested it is the worst since the early 1970s; others, the worst since the Great Depression; others still, the worst in human history. Time will tell.
Risk managers are of course known for their pessimistic streak. Back in August 2007, the Chief Financial Officer of Goldman Sachs, David Viniar, commented to the Financial Times:
“We are seeing things that were 25-standard deviation moves, several days in a row”
To provide some context, assuming a normal distribution, a 7.26-sigma daily loss would be expected to occur once every 13.7 billion or so years. That is roughly the estimated age of the universe.
A 25-sigma event would be expected to occur once every 6 x 10124 lives of the universe. That is quite a lot of human histories. When I tried to calculate the probability of a 25-sigma event occurring on several successive days, the lights visibly dimmed over London and, in a scene reminiscent of that Little Britain sketch, the computer said “No”. Suffice to say, time is very unlikely to tell whether Mr Viniar’s empirical observation proves correct.
Fortunately, there is a simpler explanation – the model was wrong. Of course, all models are wrong. The only model that is not wrong is reality and reality is not, by definition, a model. But risk management models have during this crisis proved themselves wrong in a more fundamental sense. They failed Keynes’ test – that it is better to be roughly right than precisely wrong. With hindsight, these models were both very precise and very wrong.
For that reason, 2008 might well be remembered as the year stress-testing failed. Failed those institutions who invested in it in the hope it would transform their
2
management of risk. Failed the authorities who had relied – perhaps over-relied – on the signal it provided about financial firms’ risk management capabilities. And, perhaps most important of all, failed the financial system as a whole by contributing, first, to the decade of credit boom and, latterly, the credit bust.
That is a stark conclusion. But it is a conclusion which is hard to escape. When tested against real stress, large parts of the financial system seized-up and a number of financial institutions failed. Against that backdrop, now is as good a time as any for candour about what went wrong. That is the purpose of my comments today: to diagnose some of market failures or frictions in stress-testing practices highlighted by the crisis; and, more speculatively, to suggest some practical ways in which stress- testing might deliver answers which are “roughly right”.
The Golden Decade
To understand the recent failures in risk management, some history is instructive. Prior to the current financial crisis, the previous two low tide marks for the financial system and risk management were the stock market crash of October 1987 and the failure of the hedge fund LTCM in September 1998. Both prompted a sea-change in risk management practices and technologies.
The October 1987 crash in many respects marked the birth of Value at Risk (VaR) as a key risk management tool in financial firms. By 1989, Dennis Weatherstone, JP Morgan’s then-chairman, called for a “4:15 Report”, which combined all of the firm’s data on market risk in one place. That report should contain information sufficient to answer the question “How much could JPM lose if tomorrow turns out to be a relatively bad day?”
With this as the top-down edict, it is perhaps unsurprising that JP Morgan were an early-developer and early-adopter of VaR. By 1996, they had published their methodology and the detail of the parameterisation of their risk models. In 1998 RiskMetrics Group, an independent for-profit business, spun off the JP Morgan methodology and began offering consultancy services to the risk management community. And from 1997 onwards, VaR came to take a degree of prominence
3
within the regulatory community, with first the US SEC and subsequently the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (BCBS) giving further impetus to VaR, including through the design and implementation of Basel II.
By 2006, when Philippe Jorion published his famous textbook on VaR, relatively few would have disputed the claim in its title - “Value at Risk: The New Benchmark for Managing Financial Risk”. The message was clear: the technological frontier of risk management had been shifted outwards decisively. A cursory search suggests that there have been more than 200 books published on VaR since the October 1987 crash, or roughly one a month.
The date of birth of stress-testing is harder to trace. Early mention is made of it in a technical note by RiskMetrics in 1996. But it is clear that stress-testing was given considerable impetus by the failure of LTCM more than a decade after the October 1987 crash. Unlike VaR, which had private sector origins, the official sector appears to have been at least as much a driver behind the adoption of stress-testing. By 2001, under the auspices of its Financial Sector Assessment Programme (FSAP), the IMF was publishing details of its stress-testing methodology and experience. Today, the same cursory search reveals over 250 articles on stress-testing in the past ten years, or more than one a fortnight. We were experiencing a second wave of technological revolution in risk management.
This technological transformation contributed to what was, with hindsight, an extraordinary period of growth and success for the financial system and financial markets – a Golden Decade. Between October 1998 and June 2007, banks’ share prices increased almost 60% and their balance sheets rose more than threefold. In some markets growth was little short of explosive, with the rise in volumes outstanding in the CDS market making Moore’s Law look positively sluggish.
And why was this credit boom not destined to end in bust? Because this time was different. At the same time as returns were being boosted by bigger balance sheets and financed by higher leverage, risk was being held in check by a shift in the technological frontier of risk management. A new era had dawned, one with simultaneously higher return and lower risk. This miracle came care of a compelling
4
combination of cavalier risk-takers and roundhead risk-managers. Or so ran the rhetoric.
With hindsight, this Golden Decade and its aftermath has all the hallmarks of, in Charles Kindleberger’s words, Manias, Panics and Crashes. Enthusiasm about return gave way to hubris and a collective blind eye was turned to the resulting risk. This was a latter-day version of the Hans Christian Andersen fairy-tale, “The Emperor’s New Clothes”. In a classic collective delusion, the Emperor’s new clothes, you will recall, were admired by all. Conferences like this one became catwalks for banks and the authorities alike, parading their new garments through the streets in all their finery. Risk modelling became high fashion for the pointy-heads, haute-couture for the anoraks.
The past two years have rather changed all that. The sub-prime market has played the role of the child in the fairytale, naively but honestly shifting everyone’s perceptions about how threadbare the financial system had become. The madness of crowds, as Charles Mackay so vividly put it, became visible to all. The resulting unravelling of the Golden Decade has been little short of remarkable.
Asset prices have collapsed – for example, world equity prices have lost more than three-quarters of their gains during the Golden Decade. Prices of banks’ shares have fared even worse, losing almost 60% of their value and are now lower than at the start of the Golden Decade. In the face of these falls, risk management systems across virtually all institutions have been found badly wanting. A survey of 500 risk managers by KPMG in October last year found that 92% intended to review their risk management practices.
Estimated losses within the financial sector since the start of the crisis lie anywhere between a large number and an unthinkably large one. Today, managers of risk – the authorities just as much as banks – find themselves struggling to preserve their dignity, with risk management systems a combination of sack-cloth and fig-leaf. This year, stress-testing conferences like this one are more doghouse than catwalk.
5
Diagnosing the Market Failures
So what were the failures, specifically of stress-testing and other risk management tools, that contributed to this credit boom and subsequent bust? It is useful to try and identify the micro-economic friction – the market failure – that was the root cause of these risk management problems. Doing so better enables both financial institutions and the authorities to pinpoint what needs to change and how. These market failures fall roughly into three categories:
• disaster myopia;
• network externalities; and
• misaligned incentives.
All three have impeccable microeconomic credentials and potentially disastrous macroeconomic consequences.
Disaster Myopia
In a nutshell, disaster myopia refers to agents’ propensity to underestimate the probability of adverse outcomes, in particular small probability events from the distant past. That makes it sound like a rather unworthy informational failure. In fact, it is well-established in cognitive psychology that economic agents have a tendency to base decision rules around rough heuristics or rules of thumb.1 The longer the period since an event occurred, the lower the subjective probability attached to it by agents (the so-called “availability heuristic”). And below a certain bound, this subjective probability will effectively be set at zero (the “threshold heuristic”).
If the period of stability is sufficiently long – a Golden Decade perhaps? - this subjective approach to evaluating probabilities looks increasingly like a fully-rational, Bayesian approach to updating probabilities. As time passes, convincing the crowds that you are not naked becomes progressively easier. It is perhaps no coincidence that the last three truly systemic crises – October 1987, August 1998, and the credit crunch
1 For example, Kahneman, Slovic and Tversky (1982). 6

which commenced in 2007 – were roughly separated by a decade. Perhaps ten years is the threshold heuristic for risk managers.
Models of disaster myopia have been used to explain a number of phenomena, including the tendency for drivers to slow down having witnessed an accident and then speed up once the accident has become more distant in their memory, and for people to under-insure against low frequency natural hazards such as earthquakes and floods. In the context of financial crises, disaster myopia has been used to explain the LDC debt crisis, the US savings and loans debacle and various commercial property crises.2 The credit crunch of the past 18 months is but the latest in a long line of myopia-induced disasters.
Such disaster myopia is not of course confined to the private sector. The official sector is just as likely to succumb to cognitive biases borne of long periods of stability. With hindsight, the stress-tests required by the authorities over the past few years were too heavily influenced by behaviour during the Golden Decade. Many risk management models developed within the private sector during the Golden Decade were, in effect, pre-programmed to induce disaster myopia. These models were often data hungry. Improvements in data and IT technology were able to feed these beasts with vast, high-frequency datasets. This provided, in the statistical jargon, ample degrees of freedom for modellers, enabling them to devise risk frameworks which, on the face of it, were very precisely calibrated in-sample.
And there’s the rub. The sample in question was, with hindsight, most unusual from a macroeconomic perspective. The distribution of outcomes for both macroeconomic and financial variables during the Golden Decade differed very materially from historical distributions. Charts 1-8 illustrate this small sample problem. They look at the distribution of a set of macroeconomic and financial variables, comparing the Golden Decade with a sample stretching back in some cases to the 17th century. Even visually, these distributions plainly suggest that the Golden Era distributions have a much smaller variance and slimmer tails. More formally, Table 1 looks at the first four moments of these variables, comparing the Golden Era with the full sample.
2 For example, Guttentag and Herring (1986a) and Herring (1999). 7

For the macro time-series, the differences in variability are striking. The long-run standard deviation of UK GDP growth has on average been 4 times greater than during the Golden Decade; for unemployment 5 times greater; for inflation 7 times greater; and for earnings 12 times greater. Put differently, as part of the Basel II regime the FSA require banks to simulate the effects of a 1-in-25 year stress. In 2007, the worst such GDP growth outcome over the preceding 25 year period was -1.4%; the average 1-in-25 year stress over the full sample is -3.8%.
For financial time-series, small sample problems are even more acute, especially for events in the tail of the distribution. Measures of kurtosis – the fatness of the tails – of UK house price inflation are 6 times larger over the full sample than over the Golden Decade; for UK bond yields 10 times larger; and for UK equity returns 16 times larger. To bring these stylised facts to life, consider the distribution of equity returns in Chart 7. If we assumed the Golden Era distribution was the true one, the three worst monthly returns in history – the bursting of the South Sea bubble in September and October 1720, and Black Monday in October 1987 – would have been respectively 12.7, 6.9 and 6.5-sigma events. All three would have appeared to be once in a lifetime – of the universe – events.
Underestimation of risk, whether variances or tail outcomes, has consequences for the risks facing both individual firms and for the system as a whole. As an example of the former, Chart 9 plots some unconditional 90th percentile VaRs for a selection of UK banks, based on their equity returns up until end-July 2007 and then extended to include the present crisis.3 These unconditional VaRs for UK banks increase, on average, by almost 60% once the sample is extended; and for some banks these risk measures more than double.
For the system as a whole, one way of illustrating the consequences of underestimating risk is to translate it into “fair value” insurance premia. For example, consider a financial firm offering insurance against moves in future equity prices by writing put options in mid-2007. Pricing of this insurance is assumed to be based on
3 The banks themselves have been anonymised to protect the innocent. 8

the distribution of equity returns during the Golden Decade. If the “true” distribution of returns were its long-run average, by how much would this insurance have been under-priced in 2007?
Chart 10 provides some answers for a selection of strike prices for the option. The degree of under-pricing of risk is large and is larger for options designed to protect against tail risks (lower strike prices). For at-the-money options on UK equities, the insurance premium would have been under-priced by around 45%; for options well out-of-the-money – say, 50% below equity prices at the time – the mis-pricing would have been nearer 90%. This is risk under-pricing on a dramatic scale.
These examples are no more than illustrative. But they help illustrate that the quantitative consequences of disaster myopia were material ahead of crisis and may have contributed importantly to the price of risk being set too low. And that, in turn, helped sow the seeds of the credit boom.
Network Externalities
Any asset portfolio is, in essence, a financial network. So the balance sheet of a large financial institution is a network, with nodes defined by the assets and links defined by the correlations among those assets. The financial system is similarly a network, with nodes defined by the financial institutions and links defined by the financial interconnections between these institutions.
Evaluating risk within these networks is a complex science; indeed, it is the science of complexity.4 When assessing nodal risk, it is not enough to know your counterparty; you need to know your counterparty’s counterparty too. In other words, there are network externalities.5 In financial networks, these externalities are often referred to as contagion or spillovers. There have been many examples of such spillover during this crisis, with Lehman Brothers’ failure a particularly painful one.
4 Gell-Mann (1994).
5 Morris and Shin (2008).
9
That is why there have been recent calls to calibrate regulatory requirements to these risk externalities.6
These network uncertainties make it tremendously difficult for risk managers to identify and price, and hence manage, balance sheet risk. Consider first evaluating risks across the portfolio of an individual firm. There is evidence that firms find aggregation of risks across their balance sheet extremely difficult to execute.7 To the extent this is done at all, it requires firms to make assumptions about correlations between asset prices. But at times of stress, asset correlation matrices are unlikely to be stable and correlations invariably head towards one. So pre-crisis measures of balance sheet risk are likely to be significant under-estimates. Chart 11 looks at asset correlations over the past few years. Note their instability and abrupt upward shift during crisis.
These risk externalities will tend to be amplified when aggregated across the network as a whole. This generates further underestimation of institutional risks. Consider again those 90th percentile VaR measures for UK banks. But instead of looking at unconditional VaR, consider now conditional VaRs (CoVaRs) – that is to say, VaRs conditional on other institutions in the network simultaneously facing stress.8 As Chart 12 shows, this raises the median risk facing UK banks by around 40%; and for some banks, risk estimates almost double. For a financial firm leveraged 20+ times, those risk revisions could be the difference between success and failure.
Network risk externalities of this type impose formidable informational demands on banks. For example, understanding the full consequences of Lehman’s failure would have required information on the entire topology of the financial network. This is unrealistic even for the authorities, much less an individual firm. Absent that knowledge, the financial system was seized by network uncertainty. If this informational failure is not easily rectified by the actions of individual firms, there is a
6 See, for example, Brunnermeier, Crockett, Goodhart, Persaud and Shin (2009) and NYU Stern School of Business (2008).
7 For example, a survey of stress-testing by the CGFS in 2005 found that only a small minority of firms considered the effects of multiple shocks on their balance sheet.
8 Following the methodology of Adrian and Brunnermeier (2008). 10

case for the authorities attempting to provide that missing informational public good, however difficult that might be in practice.
Misaligned Incentives
Finally, and perhaps most contentiously, incentives and governance. Principal-agent problems crop up in all aspects of economics. But it is questionable whether there is any event in recent history where these agency problems have been exposed so frequently and extensively as during the current financial crisis. It is easy to see why. Financial innovation lengthened the informational chain from ultimate borrower to end-investor. The resulting game of Chinese whispers meant that, by the time information had reached investors at the end of the chain, it was seriously impaired.
In the narrower context of stress-testing, these principal-agent problems appear to have operated at two distinct levels. First, internally, through the relationship between risk managers and the risk-takers within financial firms; and second, externally, in the relationship between financial firms and the authorities. The former principal-agent problem has been rather less discussed, but appears to have been potent during the credit boom.
Decision-making within firms is an arm-wrestle between risk and return, between risk managers and risk-takers. When returns are high and risks appear low, this arm- wrestle can become one-sided. Power switches from back to front offices and risk managers become the poor relation.9 And what is true within individual firms is then amplified by behaviour across the system as a whole, as firms conduct their own arm- wrestle with competitors for higher returns on equity. The Bank’s market intelligence suggested this “keeping up with the Jones’s” was a potent force within financial firms during the upswing.
The second principal-agent problem, between firms and the authorities, is different in kind but similar in consequence. It arises because of a familiar public policy problem – time-consistency. If the ex-post failure of an institution risks destabilising the
9 The KPMG survey of risk managers in October 2008 pointed to a similar conclusion, as does the FSA consultation paper on stress-testing published in December 2008.
11
system, any ex-ante pre-commitment by the authorities to let it fail will lack credibility. This is simply a variant of the old adage that if you owe the bank a small amount it is your problem, a large amount it is theirs. These days, if a bank owes a small amount it is their problem, a large amount it is the authorities.
This time-consistency problem weakens incentives for banks to consider for themselves large-scale risks to their balance sheet which might induce failure. The safety net becomes a comfort blanket, the backstop a balm. And the greater the risk these institutions themselves pose in the event of failure, the weaker the incentives to manage risk. These are topsy-turvy incentives from a public policy perspective, with risk management discipline weakest among those whom society would wish it to be strongest.
And the evidence? A few years ago, ahead of the present crisis, the Bank of England and the FSA commenced a series of seminars with financial firms, exploring their stress-testing practices. The first meeting of that group sticks in my mind. We had asked firms to tell us the sorts of stress which they routinely used for their stress-tests. A quick survey suggested these were very modest stresses. We asked why. Perhaps disaster myopia – disappointing, but perhaps unsurprising? Or network externalities – we understood how difficult these were to capture?
No. There was a much simpler explanation according to one of those present. There was absolutely no incentive for individuals or teams to run severe stress tests and show these to management. First, because if there were such a severe shock, they would very likely lose their bonus and possibly their jobs. Second, because in that event the authorities would have to step-in anyway to save a bank and others suffering a similar plight.
All of the other assembled bankers began subjecting their shoes to intense scrutiny. The unspoken words had been spoken. The officials in the room were aghast. Did banks not understand that the official sector would not underwrite banks mis- managing their risks?
Yet history now tells us that the unnamed banker was spot-on. His was a brilliant 12
articulation of the internal and external incentive problem within banks. When the big one came, his bonus went and the government duly rode to the rescue. The time- consistency problem, and its associated negative consequences for risk management, was real ahead of crisis. Events since will have done nothing to lessen this problem, as successively larger waves of institutions have been supported by the authorities.

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Re:RESCATE DE ESPAÑA: LA TRAVESIA DEL DESIERTO HA COMENZADO (VII)
« Respuesta #1614 en: Diciembre 07, 2012, 15:06:35 pm »
Haldane part 2
This time-consistency problem weakens incentives for banks to consider for themselves large-scale risks to their balance sheet which might induce failure. The safety net becomes a comfort blanket, the backstop a balm. And the greater the risk these institutions themselves pose in the event of failure, the weaker the incentives to manage risk. These are topsy-turvy incentives from a public policy perspective, with risk management discipline weakest among those whom society would wish it to be strongest.
And the evidence? A few years ago, ahead of the present crisis, the Bank of England and the FSA commenced a series of seminars with financial firms, exploring their stress-testing practices. The first meeting of that group sticks in my mind. We had asked firms to tell us the sorts of stress which they routinely used for their stress-tests. A quick survey suggested these were very modest stresses. We asked why. Perhaps disaster myopia – disappointing, but perhaps unsurprising? Or network externalities – we understood how difficult these were to capture?
No. There was a much simpler explanation according to one of those present. There was absolutely no incentive for individuals or teams to run severe stress tests and show these to management. First, because if there were such a severe shock, they would very likely lose their bonus and possibly their jobs. Second, because in that event the authorities would have to step-in anyway to save a bank and others suffering a similar plight.
All of the other assembled bankers began subjecting their shoes to intense scrutiny. The unspoken words had been spoken. The officials in the room were aghast. Did banks not understand that the official sector would not underwrite banks mis- managing their risks?
Yet history now tells us that the unnamed banker was spot-on. His was a brilliant 12
articulation of the internal and external incentive problem within banks. When the big one came, his bonus went and the government duly rode to the rescue. The time- consistency problem, and its associated negative consequences for risk management, was real ahead of crisis. Events since will have done nothing to lessen this problem, as successively larger waves of institutions have been supported by the authorities.
More recently, the Bank and FSA have been engaged in some practical work with banks, running stress-tests through their models on common scenarios. When asked to assess the consequences of a macro stress-test, the like of which we are currently experiencing, some banks have found it problematic. In defence, they have suggested that such an exercise was only conducted annually as part of their Basel II preparations and as such new stress tests would take months to conduct.
This too was revealing. If even the most obvious stress-test took many weeks to prepare and assess, how could these tests meaningfully be used to manage risk? The short answer, I think, is that stress-testing was not being meaningfully used to manage risk. Rather, it was being used to manage regulation. Stress-testing was not so much regulatory arbitrage as regulatory camouflage.
Prescribing Some Solutions
Each of these market failures has been exposed by events over the past 18 months. When risks materialised outside of calibrated distributions, risk models provided little guidance in identifying, pricing and hence managing them. This failure is not of purely academic interest. The breakdown of risk models is itself likely to have contributed importantly to crisis dynamics. Why?
First, the potential losses arising from under-pricing of risk are large. Consider the earlier example of a disaster-myopic writer of deep out-of-the-money put options on UK equities, priced using distributions drawn from the Golden Decade. Let’s say that, in June 2007, a five-year put had been written on the FTSE-100 with a strike price 40% below the prevailing market price. Today, that put would be at-the-money.
13
Hedging that position would crystallise a loss roughly 60 times the income received from having written the option in the first place.10
This example is far from hypothetical. These are essentially the same trades undertaken by a number of insurance companies and other investors ahead of crisis. In the go-go years, the insurance premia from them yielded a steady income stream. But when risk shifted, many insurers have suffered large-scale losses as premia have adjusted and investors have scrambled to hedge. The large US insurer AIG has so far suffered gross losses totalling over $60bn on CDS contracts alone. Losses by the monoline insurers have also totalled in excess of $60bn.
Second, the breakdown of these models had the consequence of turning risk into uncertainty, in the Knightian sense.11 Once the models broke down, how were assets to be priced? Practitioners have a devil of a job pricing assets in the face of such uncertainty. So too do academics, though some attempts have been made.12 The theory of asset pricing under Knightian uncertainty throws up at least two striking results. First, in the face of such uncertainty, asset prices are not precisely determined but instead lie in a range. This indeterminacy in prices is larger the greater is uncertainty and the greater agents’ aversion to it. Second, asset prices exhibit a downward bias relative to fundamentals. Uncertainty gives the appearance of “pessimistic” expectations.
Both of these theoretical predictions match pretty closely the moments of many asset prices in the world today. Many appear to lack a clear compass relative to fundamentals. Most are excessively volatile. Among investors, pessimism is the new optimism, with talk of a lost decade in succession to the Golden one. Risk models – or the failure thereof – have played their part in generating these foggy outcomes.
That is the diagnosis. What of the prescription? In their recent consultation paper, the Financial Services Authority has outlined some very good proposals for
10 Roughly half of that loss represents under-estimation of the distribution of returns back in 2007.
11 Knight (1921).
12 For example, Epstein and Wang (1994).
14
improving stress-testing practices among financial institutions.13 Based on my reading of the identified failures in stress-testing, let me put forward a complementary “five-point plan”.
• First, setting the stress scenario. The key elements here are devising a multi-factor risk scenario that is sufficiently extreme to constitute a tail event. Arguably, designing such a scenario is better delegated to the authorities than to individual firms, in part because they ought to be more immune to disaster myopia. In its Financial Stability Report (FSR), the Bank describes such stress scenarios. In future, the Bank aims to be able to offer through the FSR some greater clarity to financial firms about the sorts of vulnerability scenario it thinks they could use as one (and only one) input to their stress-testing machinery. This might include both solvency and liquidity-type scenarios. As the FSA have proposed, banks should also test to destruction their balance sheets through “reverse” stress tests, in order to identify potential areas of balance sheet weakness.
• Second, regular evaluation of common stress scenarios. Having banks conduct regular evaluations of their positions relative to a set of common scenarios (provided by the authorities) would be an improvement on current practices in several respects. First, it would allow some degree of benchmarking of results across institutions; second, it would allow a degree of benchmarking, and hence peer review, of models; and third, it would hopefully help in ensuring stress-testing exercises form an input to management decisions and are not an annual regulatory ritual. Comparing these bottom-up exercises with top-down evaluations conducted by the authorities – the like of which have appeared in recent Bank FSRs - can also help in benchmarking results and models.
• Third, an assessment of the second-round effects of stress. The results of these common stress evaluations should be the starting point, not the end point. These common stress tests need to be made dynamic, so that the second
13 FSA (2008). See also Counterparty Risk Management Group (2008) for other useful suggestions. 15

and subsequent round interactions, and their consequences for system-wide risk, can be evaluated. This calls for an iterative approach to stress-testing in which banks’ first-round results and management actions influence second- round stresses facing firms – for example, the effects of asset sales and liquidity hoarding. In effect, what we would then have is a hybrid stress test- cum-war game. This will better enable firms to assess the spillover and contagion consequences of their own and others’ actions, so helping internalise to some degree the network externality problems which have been prevalent through this crisis. This dynamic, collective approach to stress- testing has already been attempted in one or two countries; it would be desirable if it became standard practice more widely. The recent Geneva report on financial regulation proposes greater use of such systemic stress testing. From the authorities’ side, the Bank is developing a framework which will enable us to capture such network effects – for example, the effects of liquidity contagion and asset price disposals – on other firms in the network. The results from that framework could be used alongside firm-specific results to gauge network risks.14
• Fourth, translation of results into firms’ liquidity and capital planning. The results from these exercises need to influence management outcomes if they are to be useful; the internal incentive problem needs to be overcome. So there should be a presumption that the results of these dynamic stress tests are taken, for example, to banks’ risk committees. And banks’ executives should periodically be asked how they intend to respond to these findings, including how effective their defensive responses are likely to be when the stress is system-wide and how the results affect liquidity and capital planning decisions.
• Fifth, transparency to regulators and financial markets. The bank-specific results ought to inform regulatory decisions about firms’ capital and liquidity buffers. Indeed, there is a case for having these results set out regularly in firms’ public reports. This would hopefully help exert a degree of market
14 Aikman, Alessandri, Eklund, Gai, Kapadia, Martin, Mora, Sterne and Willison (2008). 16

discipline over management choices, as has been proposed by the Treasury Committee.15 Existing disclosures by banks are a patchwork of different practices which make cross-firm comparisons of risk nigh on impossible. Having a standardised, published set of such stress-testing results would help improve financial markets’ understanding and hence pricing of bank-specific risk – a particular problem during this crisis – thereby helping address the external incentive problem.
Working alongside the other Tripartite authorities, the Bank would be interested in exploring with financial firms the feasibility and desirability of putting this five-point plan into practice. This plan is about making stress-testing more robust but also more relevant. It is about providing that missing informational public good. In the arm- wrestle with management, it is about supplying power to the elbow of risk-managers.
Conclusion
Let me conclude. As after the previous two episodes of systemic failure, in October 1987 and August 1998, a third wave of technological transformation in the standards of risk management is now needed as a matter of priority. Firms themselves admit as much. That calls for a new agenda. I have outlined some elements of such an agenda, to address some of the failures exposed by the crisis. These measures involve a greater degree of engagement both between risk managers and senior management within firms, and between financial firms and the authorities. They would also involve much greater transparency to the wider world about risk metrics and accompanying management actions. These measures would not prevent a next time – nor should they – but they might help make risk management roughly right.
15 House of Commons Treasury Committee (2008). 17
References
Adrian, T, and Brunnermeier, M.K (2008), ‘CoVaR’, FRB of New York staff report
no. 348.
Aikman, D, Alessandri, P, Eklund, B, Gai, P, Kapadia, S, Martin, E, Mora, N, Sterne, G and Willison, M (2008), ‘Funding Liquidity Risk in a Quantitative Model of Systemic Stability’ paper presented at the 12th Annual Conference of the Central Bank of Chile on Financial Stability, Monetary Policy and Central Banking (Santiago, 6-7 November 2008).
Anderson H.C (1846), ‘The Emperor’s New Clothes’, Danish Fairy Legends and Tales (1846), Pickering. London.
Blaschke, W, Jones, M.T., Majnoni, G and Martinez Peria, S (2001), ‘Stress Testing of financial Systems: An overview of issues, methodologies, and FSAP experiences’. IMF working paper WP/01/88.
Brunnermeier, M, Crockett, A, Goodhart, C, Persaud, A and Shin, H (2009), ‘The Fundamental Principles of Financial Regulation’, ICMB-CEPR Geneva Report on the World Economy 11 (preliminary conference draft).
Committee on the Global Financial System (2005), Stress Testing at Major Financial Institutions: Survey Results and Practice, Basel.
CPRMG (2008), Containing systemic risk: the road to reform.
Epstein, L.G and Wang, T (1994), ‘Intertemporal Asset Pricing under Knightian
Uncertainty’, Econometrica, Vol. 62, No. 2, pp. 283-322.
Financial Services Authority (2008), Stress and scenario testing: Consultation
Paper 08/24.
Gell-Mann, M (1994), The Quark and the Jaguar: Adventures in the Simple and the
Complex, W. H. Freeman and Company, New York.
Guttentag, J.M. and Herring, R.J (1986a), ‘Disaster Myopia in International
Banking’, Princeton University Essays in International Finance, No. 164. Herring, R.J (1999), ‘Credit risk and financial instability’, Oxford Review of
Economic Policy 15:63-79.
House of Commons Treasury Committee (2008), ‘Financial Stability and Transparency, 2008: Sixth Report of Session 2007-08’, House of Commons Paper No. 371.
Jorion, P (2006), Value at Risk: The New Benchmark for Managing Financial Risk, 3rd Edition, McGraw-Hill.
Kahneman, D, Slovic, P, & Tversky, A (1982), Judgment under uncertainty: Heuristics and biases. New York: Cambridge University Press
18
Kindleberger, C.P (1978), Manias, Panics, and Crashes: A History of Financial Crises, Palgrave Macmillan.
Knight, F.H (1921), Risk, Uncertainty and Profit, Houghton Mifflin Co. KPMG/Economist Intelligence Unit (2008), Never again? Risk management in
banking beyond the credit crisis.
Mackay C (1841), Extraordinary Popular Delusions & the Madness of Crowds,
Wordsworth editions.
Morris, S, and Shin, H.S (2008), ‘Financial Regulation in a System Context’,
Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, mimeo.
NYU Stern School of Business (2008), Repairing the US Financial Architecture: An Independent View.
19
Annex:
Chart 1: Probability density estimates for UK GDP Growth
Chart 2: Probability density estimates for UK RPI
Whole sample (1857-2007)
Golden Decade' (1998-2007)
Density 0.60
0.50 0.40 0.30 0.20 0.10 0.00
-15 -10 -5 0 5 10 15 Annual GDP Growth (%)
Whole sample (1857-2007)
Golden Decade' (1998-2007)
Density
0.60
0.50 0.40 0.30 0.20 0.10 0.00
-40 -20 0 20 40 Annual RPI (%)
Chart 3: Probability density estimates for UK Unemployment
Chart 4: Probability density estimates for Annual Earnings Growth
Whole sample (1857-2007)
Golden Decade' (1998-2007)
Density
0.80
0.70 0.60 0.50 0.40 0.30 0.20 0.10 0.00
-5 0 5 10 15 20 Unemployment (%)
Whole sample (1857-2007)
Golden Decade' (1998-2007)
Density
0.80
0.70 0.60 0.50 0.40 0.30 0.20 0.10 0.00
40 -0.10
-40 -20 0
Annual Earnings Growth (%)
20
20
Chart 5: Probability density estimates for UK Base rate
Chart 6: Probability density estimates for UK House Price Inflation
Whole sample (1857-2007)
Golden Decade' (1998-2007)
Density
0.40
0.35 0.30 0.25 0.20 0.15 0.10 0.05 0.00
-5 0 5 10 15 20 Base rate (%)
Whole sample (1954-1997)
Density Golden Decade' (1998-2007) 0.08
-20
0 20 40 House Price Inflation (%)
0.07 0.06 0.05 0.04 0.03 0.02 0.01 0.00
60 -0.01
Chart 7: Probability density estimate for FTSE All-Share Index
Chart 8: Probability density estimate for UK 2.5% coupon consol yield
Whole sample (Jan 1693 - Nov 2008)
'Golden Decade' (Jun 97 - Jun 07)
(c)(d) (a) (b)     (e)
-80 -60 -40 -20
Price return (%)
Density
0.24 0.20 0.16 0.12 0.08 0.04 0.00
0 20 40 60 80
Whole sample (Jul 1700 - Nov 2008)
'Golden Decade' (Jun 97 - Jun 07)
Density 0.10
0.09 0.08 0.07 0.06 0.05 0.04 0.03 0.02 0.01 0.00
(a)(b) (c) (d)
-400 -200
Change in yield (basis points)
0 200 400
Sources: Global Financial Data and Bank calculations.
(a) September 1720 (South Sea Bubble) (b) October 1720 (South Sea Bubble)
(c) October 1987 (Black Monday - portfolio insurance)
(d) July 1940 (WWII - merchant ships attacked) (e) March 1974 (Price/wage controls, unions, etc.)
Sources: Global Financial Data and Bank calculations.
(a) March 1974
(b) October 1974
(c) June 1974 (d) January 1701
21
Chart 9: 90th Percentile VaR for a
selection of major UK banks, pre and
Chart 10: Percentage under-valuation of a put option on UK equities during the Golden Decade
post crisis
Per cent
   20
   18
   16
   14
   12
   10
8 6 4 2 0
Per cent
VaR Pre Crisis VaR Post Crisis
90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0
123456789
Banks
Sources: Bloomberg and Bank calculations
Chart 11: Common component in asset prices(a)
Per cent 70
Sources: Global Financial Data and Bank calculations.
98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08
Sources: Bloomberg, Merrill Lynch, and Bank calculations.
(a) Proportion of variation in global equities, emerging market equities, high-yield spreads and commodities explained by a common component over a three-month rolling window.
Banks
Sources: Bloomberg and Bank calculations
25
20 50
15 40
10
5
VaR Post Crisis
Median CoVaR Post Crisis
60
30 20 10
0.4 0.6
0.8 Strike 1 1.2
Chart 12: VaR vs CoVaR for a selection of major UK banks, post crisis
0
0 123456789
22
Table 1: Distribution of UK Macroeconomic and Financial Time Series
Golden Decade (1998- 2007)

Long-run (a)

GDP Growth (%, Mean 2.9 annualised) Standard Deviation 0.6 Skew 0.2
Kurtosis -0.8
2.0 2.7 -0.8 2.2





Retail Price Inflation Mean 2.8 (%, annualised) Standard Deviation 0.9 Skew 0.0
Kurtosis -0.3
3.1 5.9 1.2 3.0







Unemployment rate (%, Mean 3.2 annualised) Standard Deviation 0.6 Skew 1.2 Kurtosis 0.4
4.4 3.4 1.0 0.3







Earnings Growth (%, Mean 4.2 annualised) Standard Deviation 0.5 Skew 0.2
Kurtosis -0.1
4.5 6.4 1.1 3.8







House Price Inflation Mean 11.6 (%, annualised) Standard Deviation 5.8 Skew 0.7
Kurtosis -0.4
8.8 9.2 1.1 2.0







Change in FTSE All- Share Index (%, monthly)
Mean 0.2 Standard Deviation 4.1 Skew -0.8 Kurtosis 3.8
0.2 4.1 2.6 62.3







Change in UK 2.5% coupon consol yield (basis points, monthly)
Mean -2.0 Standard Deviation 18.5 Skew 0.0 Kurtosis 3.1
-0.1 18.4 0.5 32.2





(a) The long-run time series for GDP growth, retail price inflation, unemployment, and earnings growth begin in 1857. The house price inflation series begins in 1954. The FSTE-All Share Index series begins in Jan 1693. The 2.5% coupon consol yield series begins in July 1700. All data are for the UK.
23

Xoshe

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Re:RESCATE DE ESPAÑA: LA TRAVESIA DEL DESIERTO HA COMENZADO (VII)
« Respuesta #1615 en: Diciembre 07, 2012, 15:12:01 pm »
Permitidme que insista. Es un papel de excepcional importancia y poco conocido en España. Ahí lo tenéis todo, todito, todo. Sin paranoias ni conspiraciones. Claro como el agua.

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Re:RESCATE DE ESPAÑA: LA TRAVESIA DEL DESIERTO HA COMENZADO (VII)
« Respuesta #1616 en: Diciembre 07, 2012, 15:19:49 pm »
Lo último que yo conozco de Haldane, siempre sobre lo mismo aunque más elaborado. Es de este mismo año.
Tales of the unexpected.
http://www.bankofengland.co.uk/publications/Pages/news/2012/058.aspx
Y este sí que se abre.

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Re:RESCATE DE ESPAÑA: LA TRAVESIA DEL DESIERTO HA COMENZADO (VII)
« Respuesta #1617 en: Diciembre 07, 2012, 16:31:08 pm »
Organizacion Internacional del Trabajo

" 'El pastel es mayor, pero los trabajadores se reparten menos y los empresarios más'




    Un español cobraba 14,5 dólares la hora en 2010; un alemán ganaba 25,8
    Los sueldos bajaron entre un 3% y un 4% en 2010 y 2011 en España
    Alemania aumentó su competitividad más que sus salarios la última década
    Duda de que recortar los sueldos arregle el déficit de cuenta corriente


"Una mayor parte del pastel nacional se ha transformado en ganancias pero los trabajadores han recibido una menor porción". Así resume la Organización Internacional del Trabajo (OIT) su 'Informe mundial sobre salarios 2012/2013'.

"Los salarios han crecido a un ritmo menor que la productividad laboral durante la última década en la mayoría de países", afirma antes de apuntar que "los trabajadores se están beneficiando menos de los frutos de su trabajo mientras que los propietarios del capital se benefician más".

Esto "está provocando un descontento popular e incrementando el riesgo de malestar social", afirma la organización. "Ha afectado la percepción de lo que es justo, sobre todo si se tienen en cuenta las remuneraciones desproporcionadas que reciben algunos ejecutivos de empresas", añade.

"En las economías desarrolladas, la productividad laboral se ha incrementado más del doble que los salarios desde 1999", añade el informe. Por ejemplo, la productividad laboral alemana aumentó en casi un cuarto a lo largo de las dos últimas décadas, mientras que los salarios se mantuvieron estables.

El documento revela que los salarios reales crecieron un 1,2% en el mundo en 2011, por debajo del 2,1% alcanzado en 2010 o del 3% en 2007, informa Efe. No obstante, este dato está distorsionado por el empuje chino: en las economías desarrolladas los sueldos aumentaron un 0,9% en 2006; un 1,1% en 2007; cayeron un 0,3% en 2008; subieron un 0,8% en 2009; aumentaron un 0,6% en 2010; y volvieron a disminuir un 0,5% en 2011.
Menos parte del pastel

La menor participación en los ingresos de los ciudadanos "ha reprimido la demanda o provocado un endeudamiento insostenible de los hogares". Según los datos de la OIT, la proporción media del trabajo disminuyó en 16 economías desarrolladas del 75% del ingreso nacional a mediados de los años 1970 al 65% en los años previos a la crisis. "Se recuperó por poco tiempo, pero descendió nuevamente después de 2009", añade.

De esta inercia tampoco se libran otras 16 economías en desarrollo y emergentes, donde disminuyó de 62% del PIB en los primeros años 1990 a 58% justo antes de la crisis.

"Aún en China, donde los salarios triplicaron a lo largo de la última década, la participación de los trabajadores en los ingresos nacionales disminuyó", afirma la organización.
España

Según los datos de la OIT, un trabajador español del sector manufacturero ganaba 14,5 dólares la hora en 2010, sueldo parecido al de un griego o un israelí, pero lejos del alemán (25,8 dólares), el danés (34,7 dólares) o el estadounidense (23,32 dólares).

La organización señala que la productividad aumentó en la última década en casi todos los países porque el PIB creció a más ritmo que el empleo, caso que no fue el español donde precisamente con la crisis se ha destruido más puestos de trabajo que PIB.

"La productividad laboral declinó pero los salarios no variaron en el caso de España" en la última década, apunta la OIT. "Al contrario, en algunas de las economías más grandes de la región el crecimiento de los salarios estuvo por debajo del crecimiento de la productividad: esto ocurrió en Estados Unidos, Japón y especialmente en Alemania".
Bajar sueldos no es la solución

"La reducción de los costos laborales a fin de estimular la competitividad de sus exportaciones parece ser una opción cada vez más tentadora", afirma la OIT. Sin embargo, ello "no garantiza que puedan prevenir el estancamiento económico o el déficit de cuenta corriente".

"Si bien, en principio, cada país a título individual puede aumentar la demanda de sus bienes y servicios al incrementar las exportaciones, no todos los países pueden hacerlo simultáneamente", dijo Sangheon Lee, uno de los autores del informe.

A pesar del aumento de las exportaciones españolas, la OIT atribuye los déficits crecientes en cuenta corriente de España "al aumento significativo de las importaciones entre 2003 y 2008 y el impacto negativo del así llamado 'factor ingreso' de la cuenta corriente: es decir, el servicio de las deudas de, y créditos a, inversionistas extranjeros".

"Es poco probable que recortes adicionales a los costos laborales puedan resolver esta última parte del déficit en la cuenta corriente", concluye el informe.


http://www.elmundo.es/elmundo/2012/12/07/economia/1354883130.html
Toda sociedad en la cual no esté establecida la garantía de los derechos, ni determinada la separación de los poderes, carece de Constitución.

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Re:RESCATE DE ESPAÑA: LA TRAVESIA DEL DESIERTO HA COMENZADO (VII)
« Respuesta #1618 en: Diciembre 07, 2012, 17:26:10 pm »


Supongo que habría que aclarar que es bastante plausible alcanzar los 1000 desahucios diarios y que esa es la verdadera razón de tanta sensibilidad política en estas fechas. Una vez hecho el estropicio hay que evitar que se haga demasiado evidente. No busquéis más razones.

.

Según los servicios de estudios de un banco muy azul el pico de deshaucios llegará en... 2014.

Se están preparando.
--
Inasequible al desaliento

Sidartah

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Re:RESCATE DE ESPAÑA: LA TRAVESIA DEL DESIERTO HA COMENZADO (VII)
« Respuesta #1619 en: Diciembre 07, 2012, 18:00:00 pm »
Según los servicios de estudios de un banco muy azul el pico de deshaucios llegará en... 2014.

Se están preparando.
Bah, ninguna novedad, ya dijo Marihuano el otro día que en 2014 va to p'arriba  :biggrin:

@Tomasjos: la miseria que hay en España es miseria moral principalmente, y esta deriva en la física. ¿Cómo es posible que la gente acepte curros de jornada completa por 800e mientras el jefe se compra un BMW nuevo? inaceptable. No sé si la miseria es algo que se pueda cuantificar, como ocurre con el "fluir del crédito". Puedo no tener curro, no tener ni pa tabaco y estar maravillosamente bien conmigo mismo y los demás, aunque otros me consideren un miserable. El fin de la miseria en España - dicho estadística y genéricamente - está ahí mismo, al alcance de nuestras manos... otra cosa es que no se quiera o no se sepa como hacerlo por miedo o desinformación. Es un miserable aquel al que le "ejecutan" la vivienda, pero el país está lleno de pisos vacíos.
oM MaNi padMe HuM

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