And who, pray, do you expect to buy the said banks at the moment?
However, it is of little consequence as the £60bn you quote is small beer. The deficit you mention is simply the annual difference between government spending and government revenue and of course the Coalition is taking steps to reduce it. However, I would suggest that if there are any Porkies flying about they are masking the true scale of the dire straits the country is in. The Public Sector Net Debt (that is, the country’s “overdraft”) is set to stand at £909bn by the end of the financial year 2011-12. Because the government is continuing to run a deficit (i.e. it spends more than it receives) even with “The Most Savage Cuts The World Has Ever Seen” the Net Debt will continue to rise until, by 2015, it is forecast to stand at £1,359bn – an increase of 50%.
What is clear (and the cause no longer needs to be argued) is that the previous government left its successors with an enormous problem which the measures that have been announced are nowhere near sufficient to address. Even if the banks you mention are sold there will be no money to give away in 2015.