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This is a brilliantly clear sighted exposition of the inflation crisis we currently have.https://t.co/9Y0hQKORO3He gets right to the core of the problem.The Govt (correctly) printed about £10k of new money for every adult in the country to ward off the worst of the COVID economic problems.That's £10k for every adult of new money now sloshing around the economy, chasing at best the same amount of goods. Prices will inevitably go up in that scenario.But as he also says, if YOU haven't got £10k more in your bank, someone else does have your slice.A fair long term policy would be to take that money back from the people who have secured it. But that's absolutely NOT what Sunak is doing. He's recouping money by NI increased which specifically exclude the very richest from paying anything extra.We KNOW how to deal with this because we had exactly this problem after WWII. You squeeze the money back out of the richest. You tax them heavily. You limit how they can invest their wealth, forcing them to fund Govt bonds which pay back less than inflation, so you bleed the wealth out of them. And you invest in the future of the mass of the population. Better schools. Free further education. Supporting jobs.It worked after the War. Thirty years of unbroken growth, reduction of debt and inequality and a healthier society.
Covid was about the best thing that happened to my bank account. Never saved as much money.
Get an email off to number ten to let them know that there is someone who knows how to run the economy properly.
Quote from: drfchound on February 13, 2022, 05:05:45 pmGet an email off to number ten to let them know that there is someone who knows how to run the economy properly.They know how to run the economy alright Hound it tends to work along the lines of the wealthy pay the most in taxation which statistically they do so we will leave that one alone and screw the lower paid because governments of both persuasions don't much care for collectivism and have eroded it .Which leaves the middle classes who decide elections give or take .You can pretty much work that one out for yourself hound of that I'm sure .The consensus with regards to taxation is always " not me bro " .Twas ever thus .
Quote from: tyke1962 on February 13, 2022, 06:28:06 pmQuote from: drfchound on February 13, 2022, 05:05:45 pmGet an email off to number ten to let them know that there is someone who knows how to run the economy properly.They know how to run the economy alright Hound it tends to work along the lines of the wealthy pay the most in taxation which statistically they do so we will leave that one alone and screw the lower paid because governments of both persuasions don't much care for collectivism and have eroded it .Which leaves the middle classes who decide elections give or take .You can pretty much work that one out for yourself hound of that I'm sure .The consensus with regards to taxation is always " not me bro " .Twas ever thus .No argument coming from me on that tyke.However we know someone who knows better don’t we.
We KNOW how to deal with this because we had exactly this problem after WWII. You squeeze the money back out of the richest. You tax them heavily. You limit how they can invest their wealth, forcing them to fund Govt bonds which pay back less than inflation, so you bleed the wealth out of them. And you invest in the future of the mass of the population. Better schools. Free further education. Supporting jobs.It worked after the War. Thirty years of unbroken growth, reduction of debt and inequality and a healthier society.
Quote from: normal rules on February 13, 2022, 05:19:34 pmCovid was about the best thing that happened to my bank account. Never saved as much money. If enough people have saved for a couple of years and are looking to spend now, then that would be inflationary.
It worked after the War. Thirty years of unbroken growth, reduction of debt and inequality and a healthier society.
Or, we could really incentivise the rich to spend their excess in a targeted way. Perhaps certain government bonds with decent returns. I'd say most would be quite happy to do something with their money for a fairly modest return. Is that not a more positive action than taxation?
Quote from: BillyStubbsTears on February 13, 2022, 01:30:26 pmIt worked after the War. Thirty years of unbroken growth, reduction of debt and inequality and a healthier society........and then we joined the EEC An economic recovery is in itself inflationary. Demand rises and Supply, reduced during the preceding downturn, is initially restricted whilst business' take time to increase output to match this rise in demand. This accounts for all the inflation we are currently seeing (inc gas/oil prices).The Covid recession was particularly deep and fast and the recovery has been rapid meaning inflation is growing quickly.All helped by the UK (and other) Governments furlough scheme which means we came out of the recession with no major increase in unemployment and hence no underlying major problem with the economy to hinder the recovery.The middle classes and above, have saved more money than they normally would in lockdown, and now want to enjoy themselves and spend it, increasing demand and therefore inflation.It is inevitable interest rates will rise further. We've had over 10 years of unprecedentedly low interest rates, that period is coming to an end. In that 10 years the Government has singularly failed to take advantage of the low cost of borrowing to significantly invest in the infrastructure of the economy. We, and the Government, are worse off for this failure.
Quote from: danumdon on February 13, 2022, 07:44:45 pmWe KNOW how to deal with this because we had exactly this problem after WWII. You squeeze the money back out of the richest. You tax them heavily. You limit how they can invest their wealth, forcing them to fund Govt bonds which pay back less than inflation, so you bleed the wealth out of them. And you invest in the future of the mass of the population. Better schools. Free further education. Supporting jobs.It worked after the War. Thirty years of unbroken growth, reduction of debt and inequality and a healthier society. BST What you state is very laudable but it wont happen in this day and age, we all know that the state will end up hammering the squeezed middle and the real rich will get away with it again.I'm an higher rate tax payer, I've worked very hard to get to where i am, in fact i would imagine a good number in this thread find themselves in the very same position, i've made many a sacrifice to better myself including getting on my bike and moving to where i could best achieve my ambitions, took me years to get back to where i and my family wanted to be, is is fair to once again soak us for even higher taxes (we now pay the highest taxes for over 30years) in the name of equality and a better society for all?I'm in a position where i can just take it easier and manage my income to suit me rather than allow the government to dip in and increase the benefit state out of the stratosphere at mine and others expence, what if a large proportion of the squeezed middle did this , where would it end?Surely we can't keep on going down this same road to beggar us all for the sake of "society"
Probably because they spent their Marshall funding on rebuilding their industries aka the German Wirschaft wunder, we spent ours on the NHS.
''The nation has grown fat and idel on welfare, to such an extent that some have made it a lifestyle choice. We have such a fickle and privileged demographic that they would never put in the hard yards that the generations from pre and post war did''yep DD, nail in head, the first thing to go should be food banks which is now the only growth industry, up 1100% since 2010, having all these loafers (ahem) turning up for food on a regular basis, if we didn't have them we wouldn't have hungry people would we?
Quote from: SydneyRover on February 13, 2022, 11:55:30 pm''The nation has grown fat and idel on welfare, to such an extent that some have made it a lifestyle choice. We have such a fickle and privileged demographic that they would never put in the hard yards that the generations from pre and post war did''yep DD, nail in head, the first thing to go should be food banks which is now the only growth industry, up 1100% since 2010, having all these loafers (ahem) turning up for food on a regular basis, if we didn't have them we wouldn't have hungry people would we?I’m all for helping the real poor with whatever they need be it foodbanks or accommodation as long as they don’t turn up watching Netflix on their iPhones.
Quote from: danumdon on February 14, 2022, 12:08:16 amQuote from: SydneyRover on February 13, 2022, 11:55:30 pm''The nation has grown fat and idel on welfare, to such an extent that some have made it a lifestyle choice. We have such a fickle and privileged demographic that they would never put in the hard yards that the generations from pre and post war did''yep DD, nail in head, the first thing to go should be food banks which is now the only growth industry, up 1100% since 2010, having all these loafers (ahem) turning up for food on a regular basis, if we didn't have them we wouldn't have hungry people would we?I’m all for helping the real poor with whatever they need be it foodbanks or accommodation as long as they don’t turn up watching Netflix on their iPhones.Oh right, not only do they have to be poor, they have to be miserable too
Quote from: River Don on February 13, 2022, 05:22:22 pmQuote from: normal rules on February 13, 2022, 05:19:34 pmCovid was about the best thing that happened to my bank account. Never saved as much money. If enough people have saved for a couple of years and are looking to spend now, then that would be inflationary. Bang on. That's the major driver of inflation. The fuel price hike adds to that, but it's not the primary cause.
Quote from: SydneyRover on February 14, 2022, 12:11:13 amQuote from: danumdon on February 14, 2022, 12:08:16 amQuote from: SydneyRover on February 13, 2022, 11:55:30 pm''The nation has grown fat and idel on welfare, to such an extent that some have made it a lifestyle choice. We have such a fickle and privileged demographic that they would never put in the hard yards that the generations from pre and post war did''yep DD, nail in head, the first thing to go should be food banks which is now the only growth industry, up 1100% since 2010, having all these loafers (ahem) turning up for food on a regular basis, if we didn't have them we wouldn't have hungry people would we?I’m all for helping the real poor with whatever they need be it foodbanks or accommodation as long as they don’t turn up watching Netflix on their iPhones.Oh right, not only do they have to be poor, they have to be miserable tooThey could make better life choices. The £300 phone (or even less) or the £1000 one?There's lots of things to be said about second hand things, my kids have loads of it for example yet I know some who won't touch it. We've recently given away over £1000 worth of stuff used by my kids as someone needed it. It doesn't always need the state to create that choice does it? Equally there's people I know that have taken handouts of food etc (particularly during covid) but have better cars and more expensive clothes than others. That is not right. It's important to make sure things actually go to the people who need it and then to give them the opportunity to get in to a better position. Unfortunately (and people don't like to hear it) there are some people who just want everything handed to them from others and that's detrimental not just to society but those in genuinely awful circumstances.