Grays_1890
Les Howe
Terf VaderLooks like the set of a Star Wars movie. What is the central figure?
Terf VaderLooks like the set of a Star Wars movie. What is the central figure?
KRIs:What is the current metric(s)?
what i don't get about Reeves is that she keeps stating that she's put the foundations in place for growth. But I'm unsure where they think the growth is going to come from when:
Iconic image from the protests in Turkey (photo by Umit Bektas)
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The problem with this Labour government is theyre trying to take the 'everyman' approach and it simply won't work.Just following up on the above, I get the feeling that this current government seem to be a hybrid of the worst of Tory/Labour. Under tories our public services might be starved but at least we have money in our pockets. Under Labour we might get taxed to sh** but at least our schools and hospitals are getting investment. This govt. seem to be about taking money off you and then not spending it because....*looks it up* ah yes, Rachel's Rules.
Agreed but that's why the (unannounced and not in manifesto) employers NI uplift was such a poorly thought out policy because it's probably the main thing screwing the entire strategy up: minimum wage uplifts and workers rights reforms were in manifesto and while businesses largely didn't like they had prepared and probably baked in costs uplifts into long term planning meaning minor upwards shifts in inflationary pressures caused by this spread out over time and unlikely to impact overall inflation. The NI uplift caused not only a significant and immediate cost uplift but one that was unplanned for meaning businesses have had to deal with it immediately and via means of short term measures of job cuts and price increases. This has not only put pressure on employment but it has caused headline inflation to start to tick upwards meaning interest rates will either not come down or they will come down more slowly than expected which could have the knock on impact on inflation where businesses again have to rebenchmark against unexpected costs and this is where the term "inflationary spiral" comes from where governments do daft sh** like this that risks losing control of the economy.The problem with this Labour government is theyre trying to take the 'everyman' approach and it simply won't work.
Boiled down it's quite easy to simplify what the current issues/difficulties are for any government.
Public services in many departments are on its knees.
The economy is stagnating.
The government need money to rectify this.
They are indebted up to their eyeballs.
It's hard to ask the middle class for more (let alone the lower class,) as living costs are screwing them to the floor, and in general they are indebted up to their eyeballs.
There is only a small group of people with real money....and you can't upset them.
So, rock and a hard place in reality (but in truth we've been here for a while)
Getting interest rates down will give Joe public more money in their pocket and reduce the governments own monthly debt payments.
Terf Vader
This is because you take all your cues from government.what i don't get about Reeves is that she keeps stating that she's put the foundations in place for growth. But I'm unsure where they think the growth is going to come from when:
1) taxes have been increased when they were already at historic highs.
2) employment costs have been increased.
3) public spending looks like it is being cut.
She's literally trying to squeeze every £ out of the economy: she's put a straight jacket on growth.
Or passive income/asset growth from doing something close to nothing.This is because you take all your cues from government.
There is a real world out there where the growth comes from people actually generating wealth for themselves with new ideas and products and so on.
Just following up on the above, I get the feeling that this current government seem to be a hybrid of the worst of Tory/Labour. Under tories our public services might be starved but at least we have money in our pockets. Under Labour we might get taxed to sh** but at least our schools and hospitals are getting investment. This govt. seem to be about taking money off you and then not spending it because....*looks it up* ah yes, Rachel's Rules.
I agree it was a poorly thought out move.Agreed but that's why the (unannounced and not in manifesto) employers NI uplift was such a poorly thought out policy because it's probably the main thing screwing the entire strategy up: minimum wage uplifts and workers rights reforms were in manifesto and while businesses largely didn't like they had prepared and probably baked in costs uplifts into long term planning meaning minor upwards shifts in inflationary pressures caused by this spread out over time and unlikely to impact overall inflation. The NI uplift caused not only a significant and immediate cost uplift but one that was unplanned for meaning businesses have had to deal with it immediately and via means of short term measures of job cuts and price increases. This has not only put pressure on employment but it has caused headline inflation to start to tick upwards meaning interest rates will either not come down or they will come down more slowly than expected which could have the knock on impact on inflation where businesses again have to rebenchmark against unexpected costs and this is where the term "inflationary spiral" comes from where governments do daft sh** like this that risks losing control of the economy.
I have been banging that drum for a while.Feels like time for a debt jubilee. Have a proper economic reset