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New rules needed to protect the many from the few

It has been another uneasy week for relatives of the residents of the 700 care homes in Britain run by the struggling Southern Cross group. David Cameron, prime minister, has given assurances that people too old to look after themselves will not be woken one morning by an insolvency practitioner asking them to leave. But the legal basis on which he does so is not clear.

Still, Mr Cameron knows that if necessary parliament will give him whateverretrospective authority he needs to make good on his pledge. We have been here before. Alastair Darling, former chancellor, found himself in a similar position as queues formed outside the branches of Northern Rock. We will invent a way to ensure that the intolerable does not happen. There is evidently a policy gap.

The problem is hardly new. The second-largest operator of homes for the elderly, Four Seasons, is owned by a consortium of banks following a forced debt equity swap two years ago. Ironically, Four Seasons’ biggest shareholder is Royal Bank of Scotland, the bank recapitalised by the taxpayer as a result of making too many loans like that one.

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约翰•凯

约翰•凯(John Kay)从1995年开始为英国《金融时报》撰写manbetx20客户端下载 和商业的专栏。他曾经任教于伦敦商学院和牛津大学。目前他在伦敦manbetx20客户端下载 学院担任访问学者。他有着非常辉煌的从商经历,曾经创办和壮大了一家咨询公司,然后将其转售。约翰•凯著述甚丰,其中包括《企业成功的基础》(Foundations of Corporate Success, 1993)、《市场的真相》(The Truth about Markets, 2003)和近期的《金融投资指南》(The Long and the Short of It: finance and investment for normally intelligent people who are not in the industry)。

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