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Naturally as you earn more, you save more. Is working damn hard and being successful a crime ?
Quote from: Boomstick on October 30, 2018, 10:02:04 amNaturally as you earn more, you save more. Is working damn hard and being successful a crime ? Of course it isn't. But for such a small amount of money relatively speaking I suggest most don't really notice it that much. Of course on the flip side proportionately a pay rise in line with inflation is worth less for a high earner than a low earner.
Interesting strategy. Starve public services of funding for years, then throw them a pittance - £400m for "little extras" for schools? Are toilet paper, white board pens, and working computers "extra" now? - and expect them to be thankful. It's like kicking someone in the knackers with steel-toed boots for 8 years, then suddenly taking off your boots one day and expecting the bloke to be thankful.
Quote from: MachoMadness on October 30, 2018, 12:45:35 pmInteresting strategy. Starve public services of funding for years, then throw them a pittance - £400m for "little extras" for schools? Are toilet paper, white board pens, and working computers "extra" now? - and expect them to be thankful. It's like kicking someone in the knackers with steel-toed boots for 8 years, then suddenly taking off your boots one day and expecting the bloke to be thankful.I used to work with schools as a supplier of many things. You would not believe the amount of money they waste. Things that they would buy and replace just because they could in many cases.
Quote from: big fat yorkshire pudding on October 30, 2018, 01:45:24 pmQuote from: MachoMadness on October 30, 2018, 12:45:35 pmInteresting strategy. Starve public services of funding for years, then throw them a pittance - £400m for "little extras" for schools? Are toilet paper, white board pens, and working computers "extra" now? - and expect them to be thankful. It's like kicking someone in the knackers with steel-toed boots for 8 years, then suddenly taking off your boots one day and expecting the bloke to be thankful.I used to work with schools as a supplier of many things. You would not believe the amount of money they waste. Things that they would buy and replace just because they could in many cases.Aye cos if you didn't use your budget you had it reduced.
Quote from: RedJ on October 30, 2018, 02:48:49 pmQuote from: big fat yorkshire pudding on October 30, 2018, 01:45:24 pmQuote from: MachoMadness on October 30, 2018, 12:45:35 pmInteresting strategy. Starve public services of funding for years, then throw them a pittance - £400m for "little extras" for schools? Are toilet paper, white board pens, and working computers "extra" now? - and expect them to be thankful. It's like kicking someone in the knackers with steel-toed boots for 8 years, then suddenly taking off your boots one day and expecting the bloke to be thankful.I used to work with schools as a supplier of many things. You would not believe the amount of money they waste. Things that they would buy and replace just because they could in many cases.Aye cos if you didn't use your budget you had it reduced.Yes which is the wrong mentality. Probably reduced because it wasn't needed and then can be redeployed where it is.....