Bank of Cable

This post has nothing to do with Headington!

It doesn’t seem clear yet how Vince Cable’s Business Bank is going to operate. Leaving aside the dubious practice of making a headline-grabbing policy announcement at the party conference before the details have been thrashed out within the coalition, the idea that seems to be emerging sounds like yet more of the failed policy of throwing cheap money at the banks.

According to a report I saw on the BBC, the Business Bank won’t be lending directly to small and medium businesses. Instead it will use money from tax revenues to buy debt from the regular commercial banks in the hope that they will use the cash to lend to businesses. I would love someone to explain how this differs from the failed policy of quantitative easing, which printed money to give to the banks and which they have failed to use to finance business expansion, other than instead of printing the money they’ll be giving our taxes to the banks – presumably instead of spending them on public services and public investment. Why would the banks behave any differently with this money than with QE money?

If any economist or LibDem supporter can reassure me I’d appreciate it. And while you’re at it perhaps you could clarify how Nick Clegg’s promise that future cuts won’t target the poorest and most vulnerable reconciles with his agreement to abolish the 50p tax rate. Thanks.

No Headlines this week

I was away last week with almost no internet connection so there’s no Headington Headlines for 17 – 23 September. It’s a pity because scanning through what I missed I see there was a big hearing about the Barton AAP and Ruskin Fields, the odd burglary, a Greenpeace protest outside the Shell petrol station, an announcement that the Friends of Warneford Meadow’s Apple Day has been cancelled due to the lack of apples this year, and a story about an emailing rubbish bin in Bury Knowle Park. All that and Oxford Brookes’ Freshers’ Week which filled my twitter searches with tweets like “No I’m in Headington the place with the shark house lol. You? We cd meet in *$” as the new students find their way around.

Normal service will resume next week.

I try to cover news from the OX3 postcode in Headington and out as far as Barton, Sandhills and Risinghurst (see map). To feed into next week’s summary you can comment on this article, or tweet either with the hashtag #ox3 or @mentioning @TonyOX3.

Headington Headlines #78

Here’s my weekly round-up of local news for 10 – 16 September —

Two men arrested after an alleged rape in Bury Knowle Park on Tuesday night have been charged.

Headington’s specialist chocolate shop Coco Noir has a promotional video on Youtube.

Oxford Design (S side of London Road near Taylor’s estate agents) announced they will be moving to the Green Hangar, Stanton St John, on Monday 22 October.

Café Noir had a French Night on Friday – a six-course meal and music.

A traffic accident near the Shell station on London Road on Tuesday reportedly involving a car and a taxi caused buses to divert via Windmill Road, Old Road and Gipsy Lane for a short time. Fire engines also attended, apparently because it was close to the petrol station.

Five people were taken to hospital with neck and back injuries on Thurday evening after a two-car crash on the Eastern Bypass near Headington Quarry. The injuries were not believed to be life threatening.

My favorite Headington-related tweet this week:

Active topics on the Headington & Marston e-democracy forum this week:

  • Thornhill Park & Ride: proposed charges for 11+ hours
  • Should Windmill School grow to over 600 pupils?
I try to cover news from the OX3 postcode in Headington and out as far as Barton, Sandhills and Risinghurst (see map). To feed into next week’s summary you can comment on this article, or tweet either with the hashtag #ox3 or @mentioning @TonyOX3.