Having read quite a few books on the financial crisis, it’s good to come across one written by an insider that positvely seethes with anger at the mess we’re in and lays the blame firmly, fairly and squarely at the foot of the bankers and politicians. When I consider what has happened in the financial community since the first run on Northern Rock, I am just aghast that we, Joe Public, are not down in the City tearing down the blocks of the banks in the way that the people tore down the Berlin Wall when Communism fell. But, as Fernstien contests, perhaps that day of reckoning is still to come because we’re not out of the woods yet. In fact, we’ve hardly even tiptoed our way in to the depths of a dark and dangerous forest.
In many ways this is a pretty scary book. For those of us not involved in high finance, the combination of jargon and the size of the numbers involved is difficult to grasp. Fernstein tries to simplify things, but the size of the financial tsunami created is like trying to conceptualise the distance between the planets and stars. We know it’s big, but what does it really mean for us? Fernstein is relentless in his pessimism when he looks to the future (despite his continual protesting that he is actually an optimist). Think you’ve got a fairly safe private pension coming? Think again. Think your ISA’s, ETF’s, PEP’s and cash deposits are safe? Think again. But at least you’ve the equity in your home? Think again. Okay, but I’m welfare dependant and will be looked after by the State? In which case you need to really, really think again. Buy tins of catfood now while you can still afford to, because that’s what you’ll be eating on the State pension in the future.
At the end of the book it’s difficult not to find yourself biting your nails. Maybe that’s Fernstein’s intention – people need to be scared into taking action over the mess we’re in, if anger and disgust aren’t enough to do it. Take responsibility. Demand that your elected politicians start doing something against the vested interests of the financial community. And take steps to protect yourself financially as much as you can. This is a sobering but always interesting read that will make you think hard about the future (albeit rather pensively!).