From the FT’s comment section:
John Gapper: Greed is not good for Goldman
Kenneth Clarke: A hung parliament would be a tragedy for Britain
David Pilling: Tokyo wobbles on the American alliance
Ed Clark: It is time to press on with bank reform
Michael Pettis: Bad loans could take their toll on China’s growth
Claire Fox: Politics as talent show does nothing for informed debate
Editorial: Prepare for the next ash plume
Editorial: European Union is no blessed plot
Global Insight: Chris Giles, IMF needs no sympathy over bank taxes
Markets Insight: Marek Belka, Why we need a resolution authority for Europe’s banks
Notebook: Jonathan Guthrie, The name’s Bond, Junk Bond     
Lex: The agenda-setting column on business and finance

From the FT’s comment section:
Martin Wolf: The challenge of halting the financial doomsday machine
John Kay: How our leaders get to grips with a scare story
Peter Clarke: Britain’s third party looks to history
Jacob Rothschild: Europe is getting it wrong on financial reform
Arvind Subramanian: China is the key to unwinding global imbalances
Christoph Meyer: The dangers of excessive air safety
Editorial: IMF fastens the policy tightrope
Editorial: Sudan’s election
Editorial: A rotten borough
Global Insight: William Wallis, Polls raise fears for Sudan democracy
Market Insight: John Plender, When clever insiders are pitted against naive outsiders
Notebook: Sue Cameron, Mandarins have that sinking feeling
Lex: The agenda-setting column on business and finance

From the FT’s comment section:
Gideon Rachman: Anger erupts for a volcanic exile
Philip Stephens: Clegg snatches Cameron’s winning card
Michael Skapinker: We need bold action to slow obesity’s march
Roger Altman: America’s disastrous debt is Obama’s biggest test
Editorial: A more measured reaction to the ash
Editorial: Lib Dem bounce
Editorial: Swaps showdown 
Markets Insight: Mansoor Mohi-uddin, Beware the impact of a resurgent greenback 
Global Insight: John Paul Rathbone, Brazil’s faces barrier to UN security seat
Notebook: Brian Groom, TV debates we would have loved  
Lex: The agenda-setting column on business and finance

From the FT’s comment section:
Clive Crook: America and Europe meet midway
Wolfgang Munchau: Greece’s bail-out only delays the inevitable
Frank Partnoy: Wall Street beware: the lawyers are coming
Michael Lind: Hysteria that plays into the hands of Osama bin Laden
Editorial: Garzón at bay
Editorial: Thailand’s silence
Editorial: US over the moon
Global Insight: John Gapper, Google ripple effects rock net generation
Lex: The agenda-setting column on business and finance

From the FT’s comment section:
Philip Stephens: Pope Benedict has turned his back on a church in crisis
Martin Wolf: Growth is the fix for British finances
Jamie Bartlett and Richard Reeves: Ridicule is a weapon against terrorism
Charles Emmerson: What Moscow wants in the Arctic
Nancy McLernon: America’s unfair double taxation
Editorial: China must steer – not slow – growth
Editorial: Europe evolves
Editorial: Iceland’s revenge
Global Insight: Haig Simonian, Mood shifts against Swiss banking secrecy
Market Insight: Gillian Tett, Mathematicians must get out of their ivory towers
Lex: The agenda-setting column on business and finance

James Mackintosh

Nouriel Roubini built his reputation, and that of his Roubini Global Economics consultancy (RGE), on his gloomy, but accurate, predictions of financial doom. He isn’t always right though; and the decision by RGE to publish a call for a military overthrow of the democratic Brazilian government is clearly a mistake.

Ricardo Amaral, a Brazilian economist, pulls no punches in an article on the RGE web site (EDIT: RGE has taken the post down. Here’s the Google cache of the article):

I am suggesting that the military should seize power again in Brazil through a coup d ‘état, because we all know that this massive crime problem that is devastating the Brazilian population can’t be solved under a democratic system of government, and because of the actions that have to be taken to bring peace to all neighborhoods in Brazil. It is time for a benevolent military dictator to take power in Brazil and get the job done.

Mr Amaral even recommends General Augusto Heleno Ribeiro Pereira, commander of the UN Stabilisation Mission in Haiti, as a possible candidate.

This comes after hagiographies of the last three “benevolent dictators” of Brazil, who he credits with laying the groundwork for Brazil’s economic success.

Under the dictatorship of a civilian politician, and later under the dictatorship of the military important economic changes were adopted and implemented in Brazil that planted the seeds for long-term Brazilian economic prosperity.

So who is Mr Amaral? It turns out he’s a direct descendant of José Bonifácio de Andrada e Silva, Brazil’s “patriarch of independence” – and Mr Amaral’s first example of a benevolent dictator, although technically he was minister under the then Prince Regent. Mr Amaral wrote a book about him: “Jose Bonifacio de Andrada e Silva – The Greatest Man in Brazilian History”.

Would Mr Amaral take a post in a new military government? No idea. But here’s what he says in his biography:

Mr. Amaral is a member of the two most politically influential families in Brazilian history the “Andrada Family” and the “Souza Queiroz” – The “Andrada Dynasty” in Brazil is still alive and well, and in the last 200 years we had more than 50 members of our family who were Prime Ministers, Finance Ministers, Secretary of various branches of government, state Governors, Mayors, Attorney General, various Ambassadors, and so on.

It is worth highlighting that RGE explicitly distances himself from anything written for its Economonitor web site, which aims to reflect different views; a sort of online op-ed page. From personal experience I can say it is often hard to convince readers that opinions expressed on the FT op-ed page are not necessarily the opinions of the newspaper; it will be harder still for an economic consultancy to pull that off. One has to wonder how welcome Mr Roubini will be in Brasilia from now on.

From the FT’s comment section:
David Pilling: Japan’s splendid isolation may be at risk
Daniel Gros: Only Athens has the power to rescue Greece
John Gapper: A short story of a star hedge fund
Max Hastings: Why Cameron has the right character to rule
Editorial: Strong on liberty, weak on the deficit
Editorial: Hedge rows
Editorial: Oily transparency
Markets Insight: George Buckley, History holds answers to the impact of Tory fiscal tightening
Notebook: Robert Shrimsley, An invitation to govern: regrets only
Lex: The agenda-setting column on business and finance

From the FT’s comment section:
Martin Wolf: UK economy must perform a rebalancing act
Robert Sloan: The bankers need to fight back
John Kay: Economics may be dismal, but it is not a science
Wen Liao: Bismarck’s lessons for Beijing
Editorial: A Tory manifesto for the good times
Editorial: Court vacancy
Editorial: Strife in Thailand
Global Insight: David Gardner, Challenge of Jerusalem tests Washington
Market Insight: Russell Napier, Tower of debt will force roll back of free markets
Notebook: Sue Cameron, Kingmaker Gus plans his reshuffle
Lex: The agenda-setting column on business and finance

James Mackintosh

Thought the short sellers were up to no good? You’re not alone, at least when it comes to short-selling collateralised debt obligations (CDOs), one of the acronyms behind the financial crisis. And now you can sing along to the tune. US hedge fund Magnetar, according to an investigation by ProPublica, took a leading role in pumping up subprime debt by helping create the CDOs it then went on to short. Even better than the article, which should be a must-read for everyone involved with Wall Street, is the music, put together to go with it by This American Life (h/t Daily Intel).

However, we already knew that John Paulson’s Paulson & Co, together with Goldman Sachs, Deutsche Bank and other banks, had done something similar. But the scale of the Magnetar CDO creation seems to set it apart: it sourced the bulk of the CDO market in late 2006, shorting some of the CDO debt it had helped create while buying the super-toxic CDO equity, which CDO creators usually found tough to shift. Its losses on the equity were in at least one case more than covered by the eventual profits from the debt when the CDO tanked, ProPublica reports. Worth noting is Magnetar’s explanation: it insists it was net long all its own CDOs, which means it would lose money when they defaulted, and that it ran a market-neutral strategy, meaning it aimed to make money whether the mortgage/CDO market went up or down.

From the FT’s comment section:
Philip Stephens: Britain is arguing about the past
Slawomir Skrzypek: Poland should not rush to sign up to the euro
Dominique Moïsi: How France fell out of love with Sarkozy
Michael Skapinker: Replacing the ‘dumbest idea in the world’
Editorial: Labour lacks will to shrink the state
Editorial: Post-crisis malaise
Editorial: Hungarian demons
Global Insight: Matthew Green, Karzai’s gestures fail to hide strain in ties
Market Insight: Jim Paulsen, The debunking of fear signals further stock market rallies
Notebook: Brian Groom, A spotlight on the real Britain
Lex: The agenda-setting column on business and finance

FT dot comment

FT dot comment is no longer updated but it remains open as an archive.

Politics, economics, high finance and morality – this blog addresses the issues being considered by the FT’s comment team, and their thoughts.

FT dot comment: a guide

Christopher Cook is an FT editorial writer. Before joining the FT in 2008 as a Peter Martin Fellow, he worked for three years for the Conservative party.

Lorien Kite is deputy comment editor, a post he took up in 2009 after four years as a commissioning editor on the analysis page. He joined the FT in 2000.

Ian Holdsworth became assistant features editor in 2009 and was previously chief production journalist for the features pages.


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