Apparently, the UK has now overtaken the US and has the highest nominal GDP per head of any major economy. We're now exceeded only by a few fairly small countries in north-west Europe (largest: the Netherlands; richest: Luxembourg) and by Qatar.
Of course, a fair amount of this is that the pound is rather over-valued, and you can still buy more for the average per capita GDP in the US than in the UK.
Of course, a fair amount of this is that the pound is rather over-valued, and you can still buy more for the average per capita GDP in the US than in the UK.
(no subject)
Date: 2008-01-07 12:24 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2008-01-07 12:32 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2008-01-07 12:56 pm (UTC)Now might be a good time to up sticks and move...
(no subject)
Date: 2008-01-07 01:13 pm (UTC)Now, the UK. Banks going into effective receivership because of bad mortgages, and the inability for commercial entities to get short term paper. Check and Check. Thankfully, the Bank of England has resisted the same siren song that the US Fed heard, and is holding firm on interest rates.
Oh, wait...nope, they cut them, and the pound slipped rather firmly, as the rest of the world realized that the Bank was willing to inflate the pound. It quickly fell back under $2USD, which was a pleasant surprise for me, I was thinking I'd be paying on the order of $2.12USD for the pound.
If you announce to the world, by your central bank's action, that you're going to inflate a currency, don't be surprised that the world suddenly starts taking a liking to the Euro.
BTW -- if you're holding USD, the question today is not "will the Fed cut rates again?" it's now "how much." The fear of recession went from "piffle" to "Holy Fsck!" in about a week, and the markets are betting on a 50 point cut (rather large.)
(no subject)
Date: 2008-01-07 01:27 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2008-01-07 01:39 pm (UTC)The reason I think they're in worse shape is the difficulty in getting the buyout to happen. If the book was solid, even in the current credit crunch, they'd still be a steal. The fact that people are being very leery means they don't have confidence in those assets -- and I don't think it's because they don't trust NR's assets, I'm thinking that it's because they don't trust *any* real estate backed assets right now, and that's all that NR has.