Stuff we (potentially) still need to work out
- 198? - Bank of Gael then introduces Magarati products and labour in significant quantities, leading to unemployment and the collapse of some manufacturing industries across Gael.
- 1982 (according to Aruia) - A significant drop in the stock in the Bank of Gael cause investors to flee from participating in Gaelitic financial markets, proving the AGS as incompetent and marking its demise.
We still don't have exact years for a couple things
How Ainslie will likely fit in
- 1975-1980s - Gael Finance utilises Bank Lidara as an avenue through which it hands out large loans to companies and governments affected by civil wars. Many of these are risky to the point that they breach the guidelines established by the AGS. In response, the AGS encourages deregulation (most prominent in Ainslie under the rule of Joel Gisbourne in the early 1980s) which allows Gael Finance to acquire many large banks across Gael, including Lennester Bank in Ainslie - the then second largest bank in the country.
- 1984 - PM Joel Gisbourne’s radical neoliberalism results in Ainslie’s expulsion from the AGS and marks the last straw for the Judicial Council of Ainslie, who promptly dismiss the leader from his post and demand for new elections to be held
- 1988 - PM Archer Condor within months of being installed as Ainslie’s new leader reverses or slows the privatisation of many key government corporations. It also purchases stocks at extremely low prices in companies integral to the Ahnslen economy. This enables the Ahnslen Government to have increased control over its economy, a move seen as quite popular by the people given private industry’s apparent inability to maintain stable financial markets.
- 1989 - In response to the Bank of Gael’s mass introduction of Magarati labour, then-Ahnslen PM Condor initiates a strict immigration policy designed to make immigration exceptionally difficult.
- 1990 - With Ahnslen markets beginning to stabilise, Condor requests the Judicial-General to begin an extensive enquiry into the financial crisis and advises the Ministry of Finance, Enterprise and Economics to undertake “any inquiry necessary” to better understand how the nation could be more resilient to future events.