Brendan Burgess
Founder
- Messages
- 54,687
The ratio of General Government Debt to GDP was 94.2% at the end of 2010.
An estimated €51 billion in emergency liquidity provided by the Central Bank. This money may not ultimately be recoverable.
Any net liability of NAMA
Any special government guarantees provided to illiquid banks to cover freshly created bonds that are then provided as collateral to the ECB
Any residual liabilities that may be traced back to the exchequer arising from its ownership of the banks or its provision of blanket guarantees in September 2008
The ECB is owed €97 billion by the same banks
The capital base of the Central Bank is €1.5 billion
The capital base of the ECB is €10 billion
The gross(pre-haircut) value of loan acquired by NAMA will be €86 billion ( €50 to date + €18 to go in smaller loans)
Face value of NAMA bonds : "could be in excess of €40 billion"
The banks are creating €20 billion of "government guaranteed uncovered bonds" These are used as collateral for borrowing from the ECB. These are used to refinance existing debt
I will take this line by line.
The Central Bank has provided €50 billion to the banks to replace deposit outflows. The banks are paying interest on this. Presumably the Central Bank is paying interest on this as well, although I don't fully understand the mechanism. Yes, we have a liability. But €50 billion "borrowed" to provide liquidity to the banks is completely different from €50 billion borrowed to fund the exchequer deficit.
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