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You raise an important point, Tyke.The most pervasive shift is happening in UK politics, where the centre of gravity of debate across a range of issues has shifted to the right.This is even clear within the parties themselves. The one nation Tories have no voice under the ERG domination of the Johnson Cabinet.Labour have been centralising control under head office, to the detriment of local democracy, as we saw in Wakefield.The same thing has just happened in Stroud:https://www.opendemocracy.net/en/stroud-labour-quit-starmer-doina-cornell-greens-coalition/#Echobox=1656697134This is the opposite of what Labour should be about.Constructive strategic alliances at a local level, determined by local members, is essential to good public governance where a working majority is not won.This is becoming the new normal, and it casts a shadow over the integrity of the democratic process.
"at 9% and workers expected to take the hit on terms and conditions so as to protect profits and corporate greed .The problem here is, that whilst it is an attempt to protect profits, wage rises like this feed into secondary inflation.I think many on the left know this but ignore the problem.When large wage rises kick in, they simply force prices higher because fundamentally those commodities, oil, gas, grain have become scarcer.So, it's self defeating, wages rise. Then prices react and rise correspondingly. An inflation spiral is triggered, which helps no one.We need more affordable energy. That must be the focus.
H/t to the brilliant economist Tony Yates for putting the supply shock inflation problem into simple terms that even a non-expert like me can follow.When you realise that reduced overall supply means that we all, on average, have to do with less, it really clarifies the thinking. There's no way out of that in the short term, until, as you say RD, we start producing more. Until then there is literally no escape.Until then, the only question is, "How do we share out the losses?" Imagine if the only people in the world were four farmers who collectively worked a common plot of land. And they each took a share according to some agreed formulae on who did what work, who looked after the machinery etc. Their individual "incomes" were just whatever share of the crop they got.Now imagine there was a bad drought. And the crop yield dropped by 10%. By definition, on average they would lose 10% of their income. They could do that by each of them agreeing to take 10% less.Or they might agree that that would leave the poorest literally starving, so agree that they'd have a bigger cut for the most comfortable ones and protect the poorest.Or they might all fight each other for whatever they could get.At root, that is exactly the problem we now face. There's no getting away from the fact that the supply shocks mean we are all poorer. The question is - how do we manage that?
Quote from: River Don on July 02, 2022, 09:31:42 pm"at 9% and workers expected to take the hit on terms and conditions so as to protect profits and corporate greed .The problem here is, that whilst it is an attempt to protect profits, wage rises like this feed into secondary inflation.I think many on the left know this but ignore the problem.When large wage rises kick in, they simply force prices higher because fundamentally those commodities, oil, gas, grain have become scarcer.So, it's self defeating, wages rise. Then prices react and rise correspondingly. An inflation spiral is triggered, which helps no one.We need more affordable energy. That must be the focus.So where does corporate pay plus bonuses , shareholder dividends and huge profits come in to this ? .Was it right that the Thatcher government destroyed the trade unions leading to the greatest transfer of wealth from the lower paid to the wealthy in history ?You won't get affordable or cheap energy whilst corporate greed and free markets are providing it ?The Overton Window doesn't move because of politicians or economists , it moves when the people start to think differently on how they can best improve their lives .Politicians then move in to that space that's created as Thatcher did , it's not the other way around .Keith and the rest of his morons of course remain sleeping at the wheel .
"at 9% and workers expected to take the hit on terms and conditions so as to protect profits and corporate greed .The problem here is, that whilst it is an attempt to protect profits, wage rises like this feed into secondary inflation.I think many on the left know this but ignore the problem.When large wage rises kick in, they simply force prices higher because fundamentally those commodities, oil, gas, grain have become scarcer.So, it's self defeating, wages rise. Then prices react and rise correspondingly. An inflation spiral is triggered, which helps no one.We need more affordable energy. That must be the focus.
Quote from: tyke1962 on July 02, 2022, 10:30:02 pmQuote from: River Don on July 02, 2022, 09:31:42 pm"at 9% and workers expected to take the hit on terms and conditions so as to protect profits and corporate greed .The problem here is, that whilst it is an attempt to protect profits, wage rises like this feed into secondary inflation.I think many on the left know this but ignore the problem.When large wage rises kick in, they simply force prices higher because fundamentally those commodities, oil, gas, grain have become scarcer.So, it's self defeating, wages rise. Then prices react and rise correspondingly. An inflation spiral is triggered, which helps no one.We need more affordable energy. That must be the focus.So where does corporate pay plus bonuses , shareholder dividends and huge profits come in to this ? .Was it right that the Thatcher government destroyed the trade unions leading to the greatest transfer of wealth from the lower paid to the wealthy in history ?You won't get affordable or cheap energy whilst corporate greed and free markets are providing it ?The Overton Window doesn't move because of politicians or economists , it moves when the people start to think differently on how they can best improve their lives .Politicians then move in to that space that's created as Thatcher did , it's not the other way around .Keith and the rest of his morons of course remain sleeping at the wheel .Corporate greed and free markets have always provided cheap energy. Always.We need affordable energy. It is essential.
Quote from: River Don on July 02, 2022, 10:47:55 pmQuote from: tyke1962 on July 02, 2022, 10:30:02 pmQuote from: River Don on July 02, 2022, 09:31:42 pm"at 9% and workers expected to take the hit on terms and conditions so as to protect profits and corporate greed .The problem here is, that whilst it is an attempt to protect profits, wage rises like this feed into secondary inflation.I think many on the left know this but ignore the problem.When large wage rises kick in, they simply force prices higher because fundamentally those commodities, oil, gas, grain have become scarcer.So, it's self defeating, wages rise. Then prices react and rise correspondingly. An inflation spiral is triggered, which helps no one.We need more affordable energy. That must be the focus.So where does corporate pay plus bonuses , shareholder dividends and huge profits come in to this ? .Was it right that the Thatcher government destroyed the trade unions leading to the greatest transfer of wealth from the lower paid to the wealthy in history ?You won't get affordable or cheap energy whilst corporate greed and free markets are providing it ?The Overton Window doesn't move because of politicians or economists , it moves when the people start to think differently on how they can best improve their lives .Politicians then move in to that space that's created as Thatcher did , it's not the other way around .Keith and the rest of his morons of course remain sleeping at the wheel .Corporate greed and free markets have always provided cheap energy. Always.We need affordable energy. It is essential.Really , remind me how our North Sea Oil venture worked out ?
Quote from: tyke1962 on July 02, 2022, 10:30:02 pmQuote from: River Don on July 02, 2022, 09:31:42 pm"at 9% and workers expected to take the hit on terms and conditions so as to protect profits and corporate greed .The problem here is, that whilst it is an attempt to protect profits, wage rises like this feed into secondary inflation.I think many on the left know this but ignore the problem.When large wage rises kick in, they simply force prices higher because fundamentally those commodities, oil, gas, grain have become scarcer.So, it's self defeating, wages rise. Then prices react and rise correspondingly. An inflation spiral is triggered, which helps no one.We need more affordable energy. That must be the focus.So where does corporate pay plus bonuses , shareholder dividends and huge profits come in to this ? .Was it right that the Thatcher government destroyed the trade unions leading to the greatest transfer of wealth from the lower paid to the wealthy in history ?You won't get affordable or cheap energy whilst corporate greed and free markets are providing it ?The Overton Window doesn't move because of politicians or economists , it moves when the people start to think differently on how they can best improve their lives .Politicians then move in to that space that's created as Thatcher did , it's not the other way around .Keith and the rest of his morons of course remain sleeping at the wheel .Corporate greed and free markets have always provided cheap energy. Always.We need affordable energy. It is essential.
Quote from: River Don on July 02, 2022, 09:31:42 pm"at 9% and workers expected to take the hit on terms and conditions so as to protect profits and corporate greed .The problem here is, that whilst it is an attempt to protect profits, wage rises like this feed into secondary inflation.I think many on the left know this but ignore the problem.When large wage rises kick in, they simply force prices higher because fundamentally those commodities, oil, gas, grain have become scarcer.So, it's self defeating, wages rise. Then prices react and rise correspondingly. An inflation spiral is triggered, which helps no one.We need more affordable energy. That must be the focus.So where does corporate pay plus bonuses , shareholder dividends and huge profits come in to this ? .Was it right that the Thatcher government destroyed the trade unions leading to the greatest transfer of wealth from the lower paid to the wealthy in history ?You won't get affordable or cheap energy whilst corporate greed and free markets are providing it ?The Overton Window doesn't move because of politicians or economists , it moves when the people start to think differently on how they can best improve their lives .Politicians then move in to that space that's created as Thatcher did , it's not the other way around .Keith and the rest of his morons of course remain sleeping at the wheel .
"at 9% and workers expected to take the hit on terms and conditions so as to protect profits and corporate greed .The problem here is, that whilst it is an attempt to protect profits, wage rises like this feed into secondary inflation.I think many on the left know this but ignore the problem.When large wage rises kick in, they simply force prices higher because fundamentally those commodities, oil, gas, grain have become scarcer.So, it's self defeating, wages rise. Then prices react and rise correspondingly. An inflation spiral is triggered, which helps no one.We need more affordable energy. That must be the focus.
Quote from: tyke1962 on July 02, 2022, 10:55:07 pmQuote from: River Don on July 02, 2022, 10:47:55 pmQuote from: tyke1962 on July 02, 2022, 10:30:02 pmQuote from: River Don on July 02, 2022, 09:31:42 pm"at 9% and workers expected to take the hit on terms and conditions so as to protect profits and corporate greed .The problem here is, that whilst it is an attempt to protect profits, wage rises like this feed into secondary inflation.I think many on the left know this but ignore the problem.When large wage rises kick in, they simply force prices higher because fundamentally those commodities, oil, gas, grain have become scarcer.So, it's self defeating, wages rise. Then prices react and rise correspondingly. An inflation spiral is triggered, which helps no one.We need more affordable energy. That must be the focus.So where does corporate pay plus bonuses , shareholder dividends and huge profits come in to this ? .Was it right that the Thatcher government destroyed the trade unions leading to the greatest transfer of wealth from the lower paid to the wealthy in history ?You won't get affordable or cheap energy whilst corporate greed and free markets are providing it ?The Overton Window doesn't move because of politicians or economists , it moves when the people start to think differently on how they can best improve their lives .Politicians then move in to that space that's created as Thatcher did , it's not the other way around .Keith and the rest of his morons of course remain sleeping at the wheel .Corporate greed and free markets have always provided cheap energy. Always.We need affordable energy. It is essential.Really , remind me how our North Sea Oil venture worked out ?Generally not bad.If you ignore the environmental costs.
Couple of questions/thoughts on the points made.How would we avoid a wage/inflation spiral? Prices have increased hugely despite pay rises being fairly marginal. If businesses pay the lower earners 7-10% more there is no alternative but to increase prices, most businesses just don't have the margins.So, decrease pay for those at the top? I'm not sure how you could do that. The guys at the top of the payment tree usually get it because they could go elsewhere or there's little alternative, not many will accept a.lower wage, some would granted. But overall like it or not there's a reason an engineer earns more than a cleaner. They could just go elsewhere and there aren't many of them.At what point do we perceive the help isn't needed? How much do you have to earn for this to kick in? Then, how do you actually prevent that? I'm not sure you can.
BFYPOne way to do it by increasing taxes on those at the top. As Albie says, a wealth tax is sorely needed. Another way is to do what we did after the War. Have inflation run ahead of interest rates for a generation while allowing the workers to get inflation matching pay rises. That worked very well for 25 years until we lost control in the 70s.Both ways mean a redistribution of wealth from those who have it now without working, to those who work.You may well say that's unfair. I say we've had 40 years of (mostly) exactly the opposite happening. There has been a long period of a large product of growth going to those with money, and a smaller product going to those who work. And that's also unfair. It's time for the pendulum to swing back.
Tyke I think from memory that Norman Lamont used all our North Sea Oil reserves to prop up the economy on Black Wednesday in 1992It’s a no win situation. People need more money to survive to the standard they have now. That means cheaper fuel as that seems to me to be the main problem. Large pay rises will not help the situation because the corporate giants will want to maintain their profits so will just push up prices. It’s the same as people calling for ridiculous rises in minimum wage. It’s a vicious circle. I for one can’t see any easy way out if it.
Pud,"Works in the public sector to a point (as long as it's at a level where the employment demand is low) but how does that solve the issue in the private sector? Tax high earners as much as you like that will not feed it's way through to the little shop round the corner that doesn't make much money."Taxing high earners is to redirect resources to the lower paid. Depending on how you do it, and where you focus that resource, you inject purchasing power into the everyday economy.This is an effective way of reducing fuel and cost of living poverty, by diverting spending from asset accumulation to basic services.Anything that works in the public sector will also impact the private sector economy.Reviving public services by public ownership of energy, water, rail and mail retains finance generated within the sector for re-investment, not dividends to shareholders.This means that all those companies supplying the public sector pick up additional contracts supporting that public investment.This becomes a virtuous circle of development, replacing the capital extraction central to privatisation.
Tyke I absolutely agree that executives should also be taking the strain and playing their part. The way I see it and I’m in no way an economist is that higher wages won’t maintain living standards. Companies will maintain their profits the best they can and no one is better off. It’s the same as calling for some of these ridiculously high minimum wages. The only people to benefit are the treasury with people paying more income tax