1st January 1801 and 1st January 1973 – the story of 2 Unions.

Today is the anniversary of two different unions that have had a profound effect on the UK and its people.

The first was the Union of Ireland with England, Scotland and Wales on 1st January 1801. It was a union that many Catholics never wanted. Its early years were made worse for the Catholic majority in Ireland by Pitts failure to deliver the promised catholic Emancipation measure through the United Kingdom Parliament. This Act of Union may have had the agreement of the Irish Parliament of the time, and did lead to 100 Irish MPs appearing at Westminster, but it also ushered in a century and two decades of unrest culminating in the creation of the Irish Free State in 1921. It showed that if you do not base Unions and governing arrangements on overwhelming support, and the consent of the governed, the system will be unstable. The support of many Protestants was not enough: there needed to be common agreement to a system of government seen to be fair by both sides of the religious divide.

The second was the entry of the United Kingdom into the European Economic Community on January 1st 1973. This ushered in years of argument of a non violent kind over how the UK should be governed and who should have the right to make decisions. The government of the day did not gather the whole hearted support of the people for the original entry. A subsequent government did allow a referendum in 1975 in order to conceal its own major split on the issue, but in the debate over the referendum the ??Yes?? to Europe side concentrated on extolling the virtues of freer trade and more jobs, playing down any suggestion that significant power would be taken away from the British people to govern themselves. Unsurprisingly the ??Yes?? side won easily, defending the status quo by inviting people to vote ??Yes?? to staying in the EEC and ??Yes?? to more jobs. There was little debate about the meaning and significance of the Treaty phrase, seeking ??ever closer union??.

The fact that this consent is now 32 years old means that many of todays voters have had no chance to express their views on how much power they want the EU to enjoy. The fact that the consent at the time was regarded by most who voted ??Yes?? as consent to freer trade and more jobs, not to ever more power of self government being removed, has left many of those who did vote ??Yes?? feeling uneasy. Above all ,the transformation of something called the ??Common Market?? in the referendum debates of 1975 into a fully fledged EU with powers over most parts of government activity should in itself trigger the need as well as the demand for a new referendum.

The 1st January is an important reminder to governments who care about public opinion that enforced Unions can go horribly wrong. It is also a reminder that the European Union has not been established in the UK with the full hearted consent of the current electorate. The overwhelming majority think there should be a vote on the latest proposed transfer of power, and believe that too much power has already been transferred. It is high time the government made the case and trusted the judgement of the people.

Tube stations closed for fireworks

The New Year began as the old one ended, with public transport struggling to cope with a great surge in demand in London by people wanting to get to and from the celebrations.

I understand the police problem, and they needed to act in a way which prevented so many people coming to harm through crowd surges.

MY criticism is of the transport authorities. The big shops manage to deal with crowd surges at the opening of their sales. Football grounds handle huge numbers of fans at popular matches. Can’t London Underground do some research and spend some money so that when large numbers of people wish to use a given station there is a better answer than closing the station completely? Of course there would need to be limits on how many people were allowed into the station at any given time, and that would mean queues with barriers outside the station. It could mean people being told that queues were too long at any station and not to wait there. But surely it would be better to move as many people as possible by tube when you have a big event like New Year?

Instead last night many people drove to the edge of the celebration zone, parked, and then all tried to drive home after the fireworks, with predictable chaos.

Basel II means a further tightening of the credit crunch

The news today that London Scottish Bank is being told by the FSA that it needs to raise additional capital is a grim reminder that the credit crunch of 2007 gives 2008 a grisly hangover. London Scottish itself is a small company, led by a new cautious CEO who wants to provide for difficult conditions in the lending markets and to meet the Regulator’s requirements for capital. Understandably he wishes to write off anything he has inherited which he does not like the look of, just to be sure. The provisions can always be put back at a later date into profits if conditions improve. The importance of this small case is that it setting a standard for how much write off and provision should be made against certain types of lending. The Regulators will use it as an example of how much capital a bank now needs in these straightened times. It could mean more write offs and more capital raising by the bigger banks.

There is always a danger that worldwide regulators will seek the lock the stable door after the horse called Prudence has well and truly bolted. If they do this on any scale, they are tackling last year’s problem of excess, not this year’s problem of too little lending and confidence which will delineate the opening months of 2008. Regulators will reason that they must learn the lessons of the period of too much credit, and now demand more cautious lending as well as insisting on banks having bigger reserves and more spare capital. This impulse will intensify the downturn in lending and keep money tight in banking markets. Inspired Regulators respond to the conditions that pertain today, looking ahead to tomorrow’s problems. Other Regulators look back to past problems and try to make sure they can never happen again. They will, of course, once the Regulators have been forced to respond to the next set of problems which are the opposite of those of the period of excess.

All this has been made much more difficult for the western economy by today’s adoption of Basel II, the new regulatory capital requirements. The natural temptation for the world’s regulators will be to use these new rules as an opportunity to revisit the money banks need, and to raise the standards, demanding more liquidity and more capital for any given volume of business. If this had been done a year or two ago it would have been a very good thing, and would have reduced the excess in lending and leverage which characterised the easy money era. Done too much today, and it will deepen the crisis, reducing the amount of money available for lending in the system still further, and pushing banks into more aggressive competition to raise the regulatory capital they need to sustain their current level of business.

Regulators are very important players in this credit crunch. As I argued yesterday, the regulatory requirement for Home Information packs is distorting the UK housing market, keeping homes off the market and delaying the price adjustment. Worldwide banking regulation could reinforce the boom bust lurch in credit markets if we are not careful. In the good times Central banks and other regulators turned a blind eye to the big build up of lending and the low levels of liquidity held by some institutions. Now they might go too far the other way, demanding standards of prudence that the damaged and constrained markets will struggle to provide at sensible levels of new lending.

All this is relatively bad news for the UK economy, where government indebtedness and the huge balance of payments deficit add to the unfortunate inheritance for 2008. There is talk of further tax rises to tackle the excessive government borrowing. There should instead be talk of controlling public spending better, as the last thing the UK economy needs right now is a set of further stealth tax increases. The government could begin by showing it now understands the need to control its spending, by getting a grip on how much it will lend to Northern Rock and when it intends to receive some repayments. It could cancel the hated ID cards spending, on a day when it is revealed that the UK has come to rank in the lowest grade of countries with respect to protecting citizens’ privacy. The Privacy International Think Tank just tells us based on comparative study what many of us have known intuitively for some time – we have lost a lot of liberty, and the government is sending us the bill for all the suurveillance and form filling. There will be an economic price to pay for all this in 2008 as well as the loss of liberty.