The Current US Banking Crisis, What Sweden Can Teach the US, and Why It Makes Sense to Listen to Bernanke

 Subscribe to Scordo.com via RSS
| 0 Comments | 0 TrackBacks

global_financial_crisis.jpgBo Lundgren, ex Swedish Finance Minister, knows how to fix economic problems.   And now he's teaching the US government how to fix its current crisis.  Lundgren was Finance Minister during the Swedish banking crisis of the early 1990's and the solution, at the time, was easy: big government intervention in the form of cash and (part) government ownership of ailing banks.  Call it fiscal socialism or whatever you'd like, but the policy worked and the same sort of intervention is needed in the US.  

So if government intervention is a strong given in the current US environment (as Fed Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke stated), then the real question on the table is the level of help or involvement.  Here's what Sweden did during their crisis:

Sweden spent 4 percent of its gross domestic product, or 65 billion kronor, the equivalent of $11.7 billion at the time, or $18.3 billion in today's dollars, to rescue ailing banks. That is slightly less, proportionate to the national economy, than the $700 billion, or roughly 5 percent of gross domestic product, that the Bush administration estimates its own move will cost in the United States.

US Senators, from both parties however, are hesitant to give Bush's administration the $700 billion needed to rescue the banking sector - reasoning more along political lines then economic lines (that's a problem).  Stay tuned to see how the bailout unfolds...

No TrackBacks

TrackBack URL: http://www.scordo.com/cgi-sys/cgiwrap/scordo/managed-mt/mt-tb.cgi/95

Leave a comment

Welcome To Scordo.com

RSS feed graphic for scordo.com Subscribe to Scordo.com via RSS

Scordo.com is a weblog about living a practical life, including tips and thoughts on "how-to" and saving money. Scordo.com is run by Vince, a regular guy who, raised by immigrant (Italian) parents in the US, saw first hand how to live a frugal life, save money, and not live like everyone else. You can read more about me here.

Send questions / story ideas to email scordo.com: blog at scordo.com
Money Hackers Network
Frugal Hacks

Note: The views expressed herein are solely my own and should not be attributed to my employer in any way. This site is not maintained utilizing my employer's resources or on company time.