Government by press release
There are a myriad of UK corona virus support schemes: for small firms, large firms, self employed, larger firms, sole directors, charities … no need… Read More »Government by press release
I am Professor of Financial Economics at the School of Business and Economics, Loughborough University, I worked previously Cass Business School, the Bank of England; the University of Surrey, London Business School, HM Treasury and for the Government of Malawi. I have a PhD in economics from the London School of Economics. I am the author of a comprehensive account of the 2007-2008 global financial crisis “The Fall of the House of Credit”. I am best known for my work on bank capital and risk management, financial crises and the economics of financial infrastructures in both capital markets and retail banking. I am principally interested in research on topical and practical issues, ranging from the challenges of developing low and middle-income countries (I worked for three years in Kenya and Malawi early in my career and retain a life long interest in African culture, expecially African popular music), the management of the macreconomy especially the avoidance and management of crises, and improving the operation of financial services to the benefit of its customers: that's you and me. My current research is focused on the emerging financial technologies, including the economics of new payments technologies, the implications of widening access to central bank balance sheets, open banking, ‘peer to peer’ lending platforms and the application of AI, distributed ledgers and related data technologies in financial services.
There are a myriad of UK corona virus support schemes: for small firms, large firms, self employed, larger firms, sole directors, charities … no need… Read More »Government by press release
A major current problem for US policy makers is the exhaustion of the $350bn earmarked for the paycheck protection program, part of the $2trn of… Read More »The honey pot : why has the US paycheck protection program run out of money quite so fast?
yesterday’s OBR coronavirus reference scenario has featured prominently in the UK media over the last 24 hours. it has also been widely misinterpreted — it… Read More »The OBR coronovirus reference scenario for the UK – widely misinterpreted by many, including by Rishi Sunak
Save most of our SMEs from failure through 100% guaranteed loans, tailored to revenue loss, followed eventually by grants to cover essential expenditures; by my… Read More »My NIESR policy paper no 15 now published
I have today updated my practical scheme, amending it to take account of initiatives world wide and many valued comments. This now combines up front… Read More »relief for all business and non-profits – my practical scheme updated
Here is the link to this Excel workbook
Tomorrow is Easter Friday. Time for a four day break. Some good news on the economic front, the Fed dramatically widening its lending programs with… Read More »‘Never Seen Anything Like It’: Cars Line Up for Miles at Food Banks
The British Chamber of Commerce are in the process of releasing their second survey of the impact of the pandemic lock downs on smaller businesses.… Read More »BCC survey of coronavirus impact on UK smaller businesses … support has been slow to reach those who need it
An uncertain beginning to the $350bn program of loans to US small business, a key part of the $2trn congressional stimulus. Three articles overnight (again… Read More »US small business lending program: a rocky start; UK even rockier
A sobering headline and an instructive study reported in this WSJ article from yesterday (behind paywall, but may be worth paying a low cost two… Read More »“…at Least a Quarter of U.S. Economy Offline” Wall Street Journal