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What baffles me is how they say the cap on housing benefit to £400 a week, £20k per year will make people homeless. As someone who had a real nice flat and a real nice house for £90 a week inclusive of bills, I wonder how £400 is not enough for a weeks worth of rent, where are these people living, Buckingham Palace?This is the proposal laide out, I fail to see how people cannot live on this much money for housing benefit. * £250 for a one-bedroom property * £290 for a two-bedroom property * £340 for a three-bedroom property * £400 for a four-bedroom property
big fat yorkshire pudding wrote:QuoteWhat baffles me is how they say the cap on housing benefit to £400 a week, £20k per year will make people homeless. As someone who had a real nice flat and a real nice house for £90 a week inclusive of bills, I wonder how £400 is not enough for a weeks worth of rent, where are these people living, Buckingham Palace?This is the proposal laide out, I fail to see how people cannot live on this much money for housing benefit. * £250 for a one-bedroom property * £290 for a two-bedroom property * £340 for a three-bedroom property * £400 for a four-bedroom propertyWho are you trying to convince. No point persuading us, I agree with you. The people you need to convince are the greedy t**ts who set the rents and who were let off the leash by Thatcher's Govt leading to a situation where rents in the centre of London are off the scale. So, anyone living in the centre of London who isn't earning way above average earnings cannot afford a roof over their heads without massive Govt help.The Market response would be \"Tough shit. Don't live there then.\" That, in essence is what Gideon and Dave are saying.Kind of misses a vital point though. Cities cannot exist purely on the work done by Financial whizz-kids, Top-Class Estate Agents and Bollinger salesmen. Some people have to drive buses, mop floors, empty bins, clean windows and wipe shitty arses in hospital. Where are they supposed to live? Is the idea that they live in Dover where it's cheap and commute to London?We have a rampant market system that has allowed the cost of living to explode in the centre of the capital. As a consequence, the only way that people doing low-paid menial jobs can afford to live reasonably close to their place of work is if their housing is heavily subsidised. If they are forced to live 10-20 miles from their work, the transport costs will be prohibitive. So, the unrestrained market makes it impossible for a civillised society to exist.There is a more dangerous potential consequence. Many of the menial workers in central london are immigrants or second-generation immigrants. The nearest low cost housing is in the East End. So, an obvious consequence of the Housing Benefit cuts will be to lead to an influx of immigrant families into the East End. Has anyone in Government thought through the consequences of this?Yet another half-baked, ill-considered semi-proposal from a pair of immature chancers.
BillyStubbsTears wrote:Quotebig fat yorkshire pudding wrote:QuoteWhat baffles me is how they say the cap on housing benefit to £400 a week, £20k per year will make people homeless. As someone who had a real nice flat and a real nice house for £90 a week inclusive of bills, I wonder how £400 is not enough for a weeks worth of rent, where are these people living, Buckingham Palace?This is the proposal laide out, I fail to see how people cannot live on this much money for housing benefit. * £250 for a one-bedroom property * £290 for a two-bedroom property * £340 for a three-bedroom property * £400 for a four-bedroom propertyWho are you trying to convince. No point persuading us, I agree with you. The people you need to convince are the greedy t**ts who set the rents and who were let off the leash by Thatcher's Govt leading to a situation where rents in the centre of London are off the scale. So, anyone living in the centre of London who isn't earning way above average earnings cannot afford a roof over their heads without massive Govt help.The Market response would be \"Tough shit. Don't live there then.\" That, in essence is what Gideon and Dave are saying.Kind of misses a vital point though. Cities cannot exist purely on the work done by Financial whizz-kids, Top-Class Estate Agents and Bollinger salesmen. Some people have to drive buses, mop floors, empty bins, clean windows and wipe shitty arses in hospital. Where are they supposed to live? Is the idea that they live in Dover where it's cheap and commute to London?We have a rampant market system that has allowed the cost of living to explode in the centre of the capital. As a consequence, the only way that people doing low-paid menial jobs can afford to live reasonably close to their place of work is if their housing is heavily subsidised. If they are forced to live 10-20 miles from their work, the transport costs will be prohibitive. So, the unrestrained market makes it impossible for a civillised society to exist.There is a more dangerous potential consequence. Many of the menial workers in central london are immigrants or second-generation immigrants. The nearest low cost housing is in the East End. So, an obvious consequence of the Housing Benefit cuts will be to lead to an influx of immigrant families into the East End. Has anyone in Government thought through the consequences of this?Yet another half-baked, ill-considered semi-proposal from a pair of immature chancers.You kind of contradict yourself though saying you agree with it then saying 'hang on I don't'. What is the answer then, keep shelling out large amounts of money to people willy nilly? I do see your point on London it is a different animal that's for sure, though you could also argue that I have to travel a fair distance to work as does my Dad (neither of us work in Doncaster), so why shouldn't people have to travel?
Perhaps the answer is that there should be a difference between the central London value and the rest of the country (something that is being considered apparently). There's no doubt that it will reduce rents a little bit and I do agree 100 percent that these landlords are taking the piss. Though you would also argue if people will pay that it makes sense, that's what an accountant would argue. At the moment it is too easy to do that, now reducing this benefit may have an effect, it may not, theoretically it should if it really makes that much difference landlordw would have no choice.
As a PS that others might find interesting, Private Eye has a feature called 'Number Crunching', and the following are in the currect issue:£7bn = Further cuts to UK welfare budget announced last week.£7bn = Predicted bonuses to be paid by UK banks this year.£81bn = Amount government is cutting from public spending over next four years.£185bn = Amount government lent to banks for three years in Special Liquidity Scheme.And one away from politics/economics...33 = Miners rescued in Chile this month who received worldwide coverage.37 = Miners killed in gas explosion in China this month who didn't.34 = Average number of accidental deaths in Chilean mining industry each year in last decade.57 = Miners killed in accidents in USA so far this year.
Glyn_Wigley wrote:QuoteAs a PS that others might find interesting, Private Eye has a feature called 'Number Crunching', and the following are in the currect issue:£7bn = Further cuts to UK welfare budget announced last week.£7bn = Predicted bonuses to be paid by UK banks this year.£81bn = Amount government is cutting from public spending over next four years.£185bn = Amount government lent to banks for three years in Special Liquidity Scheme.And one away from politics/economics...33 = Miners rescued in Chile this month who received worldwide coverage.37 = Miners killed in gas explosion in China this month who didn't.34 = Average number of accidental deaths in Chilean mining industry each year in last decade.57 = Miners killed in accidents in USA so far this year.I read some interesting stuff about this so called recession. I too noted it was all down to the banks and posted it back then. Whilst we keep arguing over which party is to blame, it's worth noting that it's all of them for allowing the banks to run this country and fcuk it over for the sake of fat cat profits for the few. Sombody needs to get hold of these mofo's.
Is there a better example than Northern Rock?
Interesting read Billy, just a couple of points, The main reason that our deficit us so huge is not that the Govt was spending ridiculous amounts. They weren't, despite what the Tories say. The problem was that tax income from the banks collapsed with the financial crisis.Have you evidence to back that up or is it just a conclusion you'll arrived at?If the banks are responsible for 20% of the tax income of the country, de facto 80% is coming from other areas, so we arent really that reliant on the banks are we?
What is needed is GLOBAL banking restrictions. We can influence that but only to the extent that other countries come along with us.
CusworthRovers wrote:QuoteIs there a better example than Northern Rock?Better example in what way cussie?
Savvy wrote:QuoteCusworthRovers wrote:QuoteIs there a better example than Northern Rock?Better example in what way cussie?From what I have read about this fiasco, is that Northern Rock Building Society was a very good one, going about it's investments to protect the savings of all it's members, after all they are the most important.It transpires that NR wanted some of the action that all the big banks were cashing in on and earning huge profits for the few (in short they became greedy and were entering a brutal big boys market, that in many opinions, they were out of their depth). That aside NR turned itself into a bank and duly failed, it tried to be floated on FTSE but failed, it tried to be bought out twice, but failed. Perhaps NR should have thought more about it's savers.Anybody watch QT last night with that stroker who runs hedge funds. Now this seems to be the new buzz word 'hedge funds'......massive profit making machine for the very few wealthy, in times of debt/recession. These chuffs will never go without. About time somebody smashed these few, bring back Marx and Engels
Interesting stuff here, in a speech by Mervyn King.http://www.bankofengland.co.uk/publications/speeches/2010/speech455.pdfIt's heavy going, but the gist of it is that those figures I quoted earlier about how much the banking sector adds to UK GDP are massive over-estimates. He reckons that the usually accepted figures are TWICE the true level.Looks like he's preparing the ground for a proper fist-fight. He's looking to take on the banks and bring them to heel. Publishing these figures is the first shot - it shows that the banks aren't as important as we (and they) thought they were.This is proper ground-breaking stuff. The first time in 50 years that anyone in authority has openly challenged the almighty power of the banks. Who knows? We might be about to reclaim power over them after all.And if the BoE is questioning the importance of the banks, the game is open for more radical solutions to keep them at heel. Like keeping the ones that WE now own as effectively nationalised banks with a remit to foster our economy rather than to line their shareholders' pockets.Bob G - hasta la revolucion compadre.