State intervention in banking
2005-10-20
The big banks won't be fined by the antitrust office for price
collusion, but they aren't out of the woods yet. The finance
ministry still wants to tighten the regulatory controls over them.
The banks say this would be a step backwards, but they neglect
to mention that they are among the biggest beneficiaries of
state intervention. Not only were there huge government
bailouts and loan guarantees, but there are also numerous
consumer incentives (mortgage subsidies, construction-savings
bonuses, supplementary-pension deductions) that contribute
handsomely to the banks' bottom lines. Even the limits on cash
payments, the restrictions on cross-border movements of cash,
and the VAT on gold coins have indirectly helped the banking
industry reach its current preeminent position in society. If the
banks don't want state intervention, they should be careful what
they ask for.
[Czech Republic socialism value-added tax anti-monopoly
collussion]
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