This makes no economical sense at all.
The banks have more issues at hand than the simple fact they are short of funds.
Why are they short of funds ?
Because today there is far more countrywide debt mainly due to sub prime and non-standard mortgages and loans of both secured and non-secured terms, of which there is a grossly increased risk of defaulters. This can also lead to the assumption there is probably a vastly reduced ratio of savings:loans so the banks have in effect little to no money left to lend any one including each other.
The other side of this coin is many markets including the property market which is the largest portion of the country's economy is now so grossly over inflated due to recent relaxed lending criteria to such an extent the banks have took the property market beyond the level the average person can afford, meaning they do not only have a lack of stock or products to sell (cash at hand to lend to any one including each other), they also have at a clear risk of vastly reduced new custom in the short term.
The only way throwing 50 billion of tax payers money into the banking system can benefit
some of the taxpayers is if that helps the bank close the differential interest gap between its rates and the lower BoE's rates, what it wont do is bring in new custom, or make funds available for new business.
How can it be conceivably considered this is a viable solution to the problem, the
problem which gave very clear signs several years ago that the markets were already in need of checking and is looking drastically tearful now for many, with acts like this, its only a recipe for far more tears and misery in the future, tears which will not be shed by the governments and banks but the people.
Normally banks use savings and investments to generate funds to lend for further investments, most of the savings portion are the property of the general taxpayers who usually get some form of return, the truth is the banks no longer have sufficient of these savings to hand in terms of liqud cash to support any further lending for any over inflated or highly saturated markets, so now the government is proposing to support the banks with taxpayers money, which I am sure most taxpayers would agree, they would have prefered to have this sudden new found tax wealth as their own savings.
This pretty much means
every westernised bank not just english banks are in a position not far away from northern rock, or bears & stearns etc.
When a company has litle new custom, a vastly increased set of defaulting existing custom, a tide of custom completing their terms and no funds for the rainy season, chapter 11 is just about a done deal, however here we are talking not just about a company but the enitre westernised banking industry.