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Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To think we should have a regular reflection on the great financial crash

45 replies

Fragmentedbrain · 09/08/2025 21:06

Lives were destroying by the arrogance of bankers who thought they were invincible and now live on six figure pensions

It's a miracle imo they were allowed to just walk away

And we're so close to something even worse happening

OP posts:
ghostyslovesheets · 10/08/2025 08:54

Yapper73 · 10/08/2025 05:21

Yes, I watched ‘The Big Short’ again recently and the lack of convictions or learning from that crisis is disgraceful.

I love that film - every time I watch it I understand it a tiny bit more - but it’s brilliant

TheLivelyViper · 10/08/2025 08:57

Littleredgoat · 10/08/2025 08:51

I think this is key. That movie whilst entertaining doesn't go into the reasons why do many subprime loans were allowed and encouraged.

Since then lending requirements in this country have been tightened by the government to ensure that people are protected from banks own risk appetites. It makes my heart sink when I hear people in government talking about relaxing the rules to make it easier for people. There are numerous ways to make things easier for people, relaxing these rules that were put in place to protect them isn't the right solution

Yes but we've had more rules put in, in the UK than the U.S - they have much more relaxed rules on SAPs for political campaigns and it's easier to lobby politicians and they can use bigger sums. This definitely had a big impact on the rules that were put in around financial institutions, but instead politicians prioritised getting elected and the institutions profit. Whilst the film obviously doesn't explain everything, I think it gets it to a basic level for the majority of people, and honeslty I think many people don't understand it that much and even a basic level is better than nothing. I think when something horrible happens we want to erase it out of our collective memories but with the financial crash, I'm really hoping we don't and young people learn about it because there are big lessons to come from it about power and regulation/oversight of those in power for the general public. The more detailed stuff can be left to those who understand it better.

EasternStandard · 10/08/2025 09:10

Yapper73 · 10/08/2025 05:21

Yes, I watched ‘The Big Short’ again recently and the lack of convictions or learning from that crisis is disgraceful.

Brilliant film, one of my favourites, funny too. I also read the book on which it’s based.

It’s not so much the people who devise risk and reward from it it’s regulations (or lack of) that allow it to emerge.

Op when you say about to something worse happening what are you referring to?

Newbutoldfather · 10/08/2025 09:42

@EasternStandard ,

‘It’s not so much the people who devise risk and reward from it it’s regulations (or lack of) that allow it to emerge.’

Rules and regulations only go so far. You need people to be moral/ethical or they will always find a way around rules (legal or otherwise).

The lack of shame and consequence allows people to repeat the same behaviour time and time again and, as long as they are wealthy, society will welcome them back.

Compare 2008 to the Profumo affair. He really didn’t do anything that awful by today’s standards but he was shamed for life.

You can’t regulate morality.

Fragmentedbrain · 10/08/2025 09:48

MyNameIsX · 10/08/2025 06:46

You are incorrectly attempting to distil an extremely complex event into a simple blame game.

Hi Susan 🫡

OP posts:
Fragmentedbrain · 10/08/2025 09:50

EasternStandard · 10/08/2025 09:10

Brilliant film, one of my favourites, funny too. I also read the book on which it’s based.

It’s not so much the people who devise risk and reward from it it’s regulations (or lack of) that allow it to emerge.

Op when you say about to something worse happening what are you referring to?

Edited

I'm talking about a great depression. Mass starvation. The consequences of hubris.

Blaming the government for a lack of regulation is like blaming a murder on the knife manufacturer.

OP posts:
legsekeven · 10/08/2025 09:59

I think alot of people didn’t want to hold themselves accountable. Yes some banks and “bankers” did bad things however many people overextended themselves.

tramtracks · 10/08/2025 10:05

HappilyUrbanTrimmer · 10/08/2025 07:44

Yanbu at all to see that we are heading for another big bubble-burst but it is naive to think that through responsible stewardship and regulation we can prevent these disasters. They will only stop if we actually overthrow capitalism and establish an entirely new paradigm for the global economy that doesn't use money in the same way. Under the current structure there are enormous numbers of people who bend every ounce of their effort to identify growing bubbles, inflating them to maximise their own profit and diving off just before the bubble bursts (which triggers the bubble bursting) leaving other people to deal with the loss. This is all nicely packaged in formal declarations about risk but the plain english version is that investors need a ready supply of mugs who are going to lose their money, in order to ensure that those at the top keep raking it in. The thing you are trying to eliminate isn't a "flaw in the system" it is the entire raison d'etre of the system and cannot be eliminated without destroying the system.

Edited

Certainly capitalism is flawed but what is a better alternative? For me it is best described as the least worst option.

lljkk · 10/08/2025 10:07

There's a big push right now to deregulate banking & investment sector in UK.
Even louder noises in USA.

Yeah of course revisiting optimal regulatory framework is good practice (constant process), but making noises like the guard rails are being swept away: am not happy to hear that.

Wouldn't surprise me if foundations of next Fin. crisis are being laid now.

Banks should never be "too big" to be allowed to fail.

Govts should provide stable environment (inflation constraint, peaceful transfer of political power, independence for central banks) & after that investors should be expected to shoulder more risk themselves, not have a huge safety net funded by all taxpayers meaning the big investor group is effectively very low.

Saying that as an investor myself who favours 'medium-high risk' for at least part of the portfolio.

tramtracks · 10/08/2025 10:08

legsekeven · 10/08/2025 09:59

I think alot of people didn’t want to hold themselves accountable. Yes some banks and “bankers” did bad things however many people overextended themselves.

Totally agree.

This sense of everything being someone else’s fault is pervasive.

Newbutoldfather · 10/08/2025 11:23

It’s a shame this thread (and others like it) get so little traction.

2008 and how global governments and central banks responded to it was a massive fracturing of the implicit social contract between government and the vast majority of tax payers.

That and uncontrolled immigration were the two main factors leading to a growth in populism.

Locutus2000 · 10/08/2025 11:54

Fragmentedbrain · 10/08/2025 09:50

I'm talking about a great depression. Mass starvation. The consequences of hubris.

Blaming the government for a lack of regulation is like blaming a murder on the knife manufacturer.

I'm talking about a great depression. Mass starvation. The consequences of hubris.

An awful lot of posters seem to have identical concerns recently.

Almost as if it is orchestrated.

MyNameIsX · 10/08/2025 12:41

Fragmentedbrain · 10/08/2025 09:48

Hi Susan 🫡

Talking to yourself is not healthy…

EasternStandard · 10/08/2025 12:45

Fragmentedbrain · 10/08/2025 09:50

I'm talking about a great depression. Mass starvation. The consequences of hubris.

Blaming the government for a lack of regulation is like blaming a murder on the knife manufacturer.

Well not really. If you reward something don’t be surprised when people do it.

I’m getting the doom part ok in your post, but what is the trigger, are you thinking of AI, climate, other, can you say?

EasternStandard · 10/08/2025 12:47

Newbutoldfather · 10/08/2025 09:42

@EasternStandard ,

‘It’s not so much the people who devise risk and reward from it it’s regulations (or lack of) that allow it to emerge.’

Rules and regulations only go so far. You need people to be moral/ethical or they will always find a way around rules (legal or otherwise).

The lack of shame and consequence allows people to repeat the same behaviour time and time again and, as long as they are wealthy, society will welcome them back.

Compare 2008 to the Profumo affair. He really didn’t do anything that awful by today’s standards but he was shamed for life.

You can’t regulate morality.

How do you want to control risk and reward? Morality sounds a bit religious as a way to control.

Did you work in the City, what drew you to it?

Newbutoldfather · 10/08/2025 14:25

@EasternStandard ,

‘How do you want to control risk and reward? ‘

Of course you need rules and regulations. But, firstly, failure needs to have a meaningful cost. The senior people in banks shouldn’t be able to fail time after time and remain personally wealthy (and free, if it is fraudulent).

But then you need people to have an ethical/moral compass which leads them to trade/invest in such a way that they are not just gambling with shareholder funds.

What typically happens is that dealers take positions which work 9/10 times but just risk what Naseem Taleb dubbed black swans.
And when that black swan happens, they just lose their job and move on to the next well paid position.

‘Morality sounds a bit religious as a way to control.’

It is. And that is a big problem. We live in a post religious age and yet haven’t found a replacement for those old fashioned concepts like professional pride and shame. So people just optimise personal economic outcomes without regard for how it might affect others.

I hardly spoke to a single person after 2008 who felt ashamed of embarrassed. It was all just ex post facto justification for why they didn’t do much wrong and how awful it was they had to work for ‘nothing’ (nothing being equal to their basic salary of around £150k, as there were no bonuses that year).

BreakingBroken · 10/08/2025 15:01

Neither my mother born in 32 or grandparents starved (born in 1899 and 1910) during the great depressions. Judging by family stories both very different families did okay. One farming the other in an inner city working in a factory.
Uk history suggests people actually ate better during ww2 with rationing planning and community support.
I’m more worried about a sudden event and mass chaos.

MuffinsAreJustCakesAtBreakfast · 10/08/2025 15:03

Yapper73 · 10/08/2025 05:21

Yes, I watched ‘The Big Short’ again recently and the lack of convictions or learning from that crisis is disgraceful.

That is one of the greatest films ever made !

wonderstuff · 10/08/2025 19:45

tramtracks · 10/08/2025 10:08

Totally agree.

This sense of everything being someone else’s fault is pervasive.

I think if you’ve never struggled to get work on a reasonable income, it’s easy to assume you will always be fine. I think for lots of us who came of age in the mid 90s it was a huge shock. I had been in debt since I started university, the way student finance was structured in was very much encouraged as a way to fund yourself, debt was cheap and easily available, I’d had no financial education, my parents generation didn’t talk about money, it was a taboo subject, but they too were encouraged to stretch themselves on mortgages, because inflation meant loans depreciated in actual value and house prices seemed to only go in one direction… it was a huge shock for us. We will never be in that position again. Many people were in a worse position than us, people who ended up in negative equity. There’s still people trapped in mortgages they can’t change.

Crushed23 · 10/08/2025 23:28

toiletpiper · 10/08/2025 06:29

Well we never recovered from it so maybe that's why it's avoided!

It’s partly this, it’s partly because so much has happened since then that’s more tangible for people to talk about: Covid, wars and polarisation in politics. I’m not sure people have enough of a grasp of mortgage-backed securities and what actually happened in the 2008 crash to begin to talk about it / assess the potential risk of it happening again.

Also, society has become more money obsessed on a personal level due to COL and social media/influencer culture, and it’s become socially acceptable to get rich through whatever means and not necessarily ‘earn’ money. Hard to criticise bankers for excessive bonuses who at least put in the hours in over decades-long careers, when 20 year-olds are making millions from going ‘viral’ on TikTok, or having gang bangs on OnlyFans.

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