Totally agree. Surely the whole point of capitalism is that it is economic natural selection? We're capitalist until the government's mates are in trouble, then it all gets a bit socialist!I question the wisdom of bailing the bank out in the first place, I think the capitalist system has to be left to it's own devices and not undermined, but having taken over the bank it was essential to get it away from state ownership at the earliest opportunity.
This really does my head in. Cheap credit created the housing bubble and that bubble is now being artificially sustained so they don't lose votes. Low interest rates and quantitative easing are creating the inflationary situation we're in at the moment. I believe this is being done deliberately so the vast amount of personal debt is effectively reduced. The problem is, those of us who choose not to buy a house due to believing they are overvalued are also missing out on interest from savings.I also question the low interest rates underpinning property values that have led to the survival of the feckless who borrowed recklessly, pushing property prices out of proportion to incomes, and which is punishing the sensible who have worked and saved and helped the capitalist system to flourish. Most asset values fall in a recession ( that's part of the game) and that allows the flushing out of weak business and property owners and creates opportunity for the redistribution of wealth. Property prices are being underpinned on a never seen before scale and again this undermines the system which has given hope to so many young people in the past.
Those who have been reckless, both the rich and poor, are getting away with it. Those of us without debt have very few low risk options to put savings into.