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Oh they've got brains. Just no common sense or self awareness of how their relentless appalling behaviour and their baffling, selfish decisions will be perceived by the electorate. Which is why Starmer gets in without lifting a finger or having any policies. All 100% self inflicted by supposedly intelligent people.
Quote from: Panda on October 03, 2022, 12:03:58 pmOh they've got brains. Just no common sense or self awareness of how their relentless appalling behaviour and their baffling, selfish decisions will be perceived by the electorate. Which is why Starmer gets in without lifting a finger or having any policies. All 100% self inflicted by supposedly intelligent people. Somebody hasn't been watching the Labour Conference.
How long has the labour windfall tax been a policy? longer than the government's aye?
Quote from: SydneyRover on October 03, 2022, 12:06:55 pmHow long has the labour windfall tax been a policy? longer than the government's aye?https://www.channel4.com/news/factcheck/factcheck-labour-keeps-repeating-misleading-claim-on-energy-windfall-taxI can't see what they've actually proposed as a % etc other than scrapping the capital allowance for the energy companies. Labour appear to have lots of (pretty good) policy ideas but still seem a bit light on how they'd fund them. From the mini budget there isn't that much they've actually said they'll scrap as yet.
Quote from: Glyn_Wigley on October 03, 2022, 12:52:26 pmQuote from: Panda on October 03, 2022, 12:03:58 pmOh they've got brains. Just no common sense or self awareness of how their relentless appalling behaviour and their baffling, selfish decisions will be perceived by the electorate. Which is why Starmer gets in without lifting a finger or having any policies. All 100% self inflicted by supposedly intelligent people. Somebody hasn't been watching the Labour Conference.For good reason!
Quote from: big fat yorkshire pudding on October 03, 2022, 01:45:49 pmQuote from: SydneyRover on October 03, 2022, 12:06:55 pmHow long has the labour windfall tax been a policy? longer than the government's aye?https://www.channel4.com/news/factcheck/factcheck-labour-keeps-repeating-misleading-claim-on-energy-windfall-taxI can't see what they've actually proposed as a % etc other than scrapping the capital allowance for the energy companies. Labour appear to have lots of (pretty good) policy ideas but still seem a bit light on how they'd fund them. From the mini budget there isn't that much they've actually said they'll scrap as yet.I can't actually see how the govt is going to fund anything yet which is more to the point wouldn't you agree? It caused the turmoil in the markets and forced the BoE to bail them out. It appears most economists agree, those good with numbers that is ....... a policy failure of massive proportions. It does not bode well for anyone, except an opposition trying to overturn a massive majority maybe.
Quote from: Panda on October 03, 2022, 12:53:43 pmQuote from: Glyn_Wigley on October 03, 2022, 12:52:26 pmQuote from: Panda on October 03, 2022, 12:03:58 pmOh they've got brains. Just no common sense or self awareness of how their relentless appalling behaviour and their baffling, selfish decisions will be perceived by the electorate. Which is why Starmer gets in without lifting a finger or having any policies. All 100% self inflicted by supposedly intelligent people. Somebody hasn't been watching the Labour Conference.For good reason! So you're talking crap with good reason!
Quote from: Glyn_Wigley on October 03, 2022, 03:06:48 pmQuote from: Panda on October 03, 2022, 12:53:43 pmQuote from: Glyn_Wigley on October 03, 2022, 12:52:26 pmQuote from: Panda on October 03, 2022, 12:03:58 pmOh they've got brains. Just no common sense or self awareness of how their relentless appalling behaviour and their baffling, selfish decisions will be perceived by the electorate. Which is why Starmer gets in without lifting a finger or having any policies. All 100% self inflicted by supposedly intelligent people. Somebody hasn't been watching the Labour Conference.For good reason! So you're talking crap with good reason! Another brain dead Labour obsessive. Voted Labour all your life have you? Because your old man did and his old man before that? Because you have no individuality? I see.
Quote from: BillyStubbsTears on September 29, 2022, 12:27:50 pmQuote from: ncRover on September 29, 2022, 09:11:43 amQuote from: BillyStubbsTears on September 28, 2022, 09:12:01 pmQuote from: ncRover on September 28, 2022, 08:59:09 pmThe IMF didn’t have a problem with the many multiple times more money spent on trying to stop covid and grind the economy to a halt. More so than the £2bn initially lost through tax cuts, why’s that?Do you really want to know, or is this just another knee jerk anti-lockdown spasm?My point was to highlight the relatively small ratio of the tax cuts. For example 2bn in relation to 150bn energy bills support package or 32bn on track and trace.No need for the spiteful tone, I’m just trying to understand things.Apologies. I saw exactly that line ooze out of loads of right wing COVID denial sites yesterday, repeated by people who should know better. In fact people who probably DO know better but chose to feed folk that bullshit line. Here's why there's no comparison. Oh and before we start, the tax cuts are £45bn, not £2bn.1) Why wasn't Govt spending to support people and companies in lockdown a problem? You have to understand how Govts borrow. They don't pop down to see the bank manager and ask for a loan. The Treasury offers billions of pounds of Govt bonds, promising to pay interest. I'm effect, the financial markets, dominated by big pension funds decide what interest rate they want in return for buying those bonds. In 2020, the world economy was grinding to a halt. There were very few safe places for money to go. No big commercial investment opportunities were safe. So the financial markets were falling over themselves to lend money to Govts all round the world at effectively zero interest rate. 2) COVID related Govt spending, though large, had a purpose and was always going to be time limited. The markets could see that.3) Onto Kwarteng. Where to start? He's made several decisions which have freaked the market.4) Before that, look at the global context. We are now asking to borrow money in a world awash with rapidly growing economies that have bounced back into growth post-COVID. We now have to persuade bond buyers to buy ours. That means they need to have confidence in the direction our Govt finances are going.5) And there's the rub. Kwarteng announced £45bn of tax cuts on top of £150bn of energy cap funding and he didn't say a single word about how that would be funded. The tax cuts are key here because they would constitute an ongoing cost, year after year. That's called a current account deficit and you cannot run a country over the long term by borrowing to fill a current account deficit.6) He claimed, against 99.9% of economic advisers' opinions, that the tax cuts would boost long term growth and thus fill the whole in the accounts.7) He refused to publish a report by the OBR into what they thought the effect of the tax cuts would be.8) And the Govt is saying that their policy is growth, while the BoE is following its legally enforced mandate to bring down inflation. Never happened before that the Treasury and the BoE are pulling in directly opposite directions. 9) Put all that together and the financial markets said, "we think you are taking a massive risk spadger. We're not even sure there are any grown ups in charge anymore. We'll lend to you, but only if you give us 5% interest to cover the risk." (It was <1% this time last year. 10) That bond rate rise, if it sticks, adds £100bn to our annual debt interest bill. That massively depressed our future economic outlook. That puts downward pressure in the Pound, which means more inflation and higher interest rates to control it.++++++++++That's why this is nothing like the COVID spending. I saw someone sum it up far better yesterday. They said we are suffering because the markets are demanding a Moron Premium when they lend to us. Because what Truss and Kwarteng have done is THE most moronic economic policy decision, certainly in 50 years, possibly in the last century since Churchill brought back the Gold Standard.Fair enough, good points.I have libertarian (this isn’t “far-right” as suggested above) leanings but as you have said, politics is about being adaptable and knowing when the time is right to have more of the policies you would ideally like.I just believe in a smaller state as it has just grown and grown. After covid, people expect it to do everything.Has the pound slightly recovered? What would this suggest?
Quote from: ncRover on September 29, 2022, 09:11:43 amQuote from: BillyStubbsTears on September 28, 2022, 09:12:01 pmQuote from: ncRover on September 28, 2022, 08:59:09 pmThe IMF didn’t have a problem with the many multiple times more money spent on trying to stop covid and grind the economy to a halt. More so than the £2bn initially lost through tax cuts, why’s that?Do you really want to know, or is this just another knee jerk anti-lockdown spasm?My point was to highlight the relatively small ratio of the tax cuts. For example 2bn in relation to 150bn energy bills support package or 32bn on track and trace.No need for the spiteful tone, I’m just trying to understand things.Apologies. I saw exactly that line ooze out of loads of right wing COVID denial sites yesterday, repeated by people who should know better. In fact people who probably DO know better but chose to feed folk that bullshit line. Here's why there's no comparison. Oh and before we start, the tax cuts are £45bn, not £2bn.1) Why wasn't Govt spending to support people and companies in lockdown a problem? You have to understand how Govts borrow. They don't pop down to see the bank manager and ask for a loan. The Treasury offers billions of pounds of Govt bonds, promising to pay interest. I'm effect, the financial markets, dominated by big pension funds decide what interest rate they want in return for buying those bonds. In 2020, the world economy was grinding to a halt. There were very few safe places for money to go. No big commercial investment opportunities were safe. So the financial markets were falling over themselves to lend money to Govts all round the world at effectively zero interest rate. 2) COVID related Govt spending, though large, had a purpose and was always going to be time limited. The markets could see that.3) Onto Kwarteng. Where to start? He's made several decisions which have freaked the market.4) Before that, look at the global context. We are now asking to borrow money in a world awash with rapidly growing economies that have bounced back into growth post-COVID. We now have to persuade bond buyers to buy ours. That means they need to have confidence in the direction our Govt finances are going.5) And there's the rub. Kwarteng announced £45bn of tax cuts on top of £150bn of energy cap funding and he didn't say a single word about how that would be funded. The tax cuts are key here because they would constitute an ongoing cost, year after year. That's called a current account deficit and you cannot run a country over the long term by borrowing to fill a current account deficit.6) He claimed, against 99.9% of economic advisers' opinions, that the tax cuts would boost long term growth and thus fill the whole in the accounts.7) He refused to publish a report by the OBR into what they thought the effect of the tax cuts would be.8) And the Govt is saying that their policy is growth, while the BoE is following its legally enforced mandate to bring down inflation. Never happened before that the Treasury and the BoE are pulling in directly opposite directions. 9) Put all that together and the financial markets said, "we think you are taking a massive risk spadger. We're not even sure there are any grown ups in charge anymore. We'll lend to you, but only if you give us 5% interest to cover the risk." (It was <1% this time last year. 10) That bond rate rise, if it sticks, adds £100bn to our annual debt interest bill. That massively depressed our future economic outlook. That puts downward pressure in the Pound, which means more inflation and higher interest rates to control it.++++++++++That's why this is nothing like the COVID spending. I saw someone sum it up far better yesterday. They said we are suffering because the markets are demanding a Moron Premium when they lend to us. Because what Truss and Kwarteng have done is THE most moronic economic policy decision, certainly in 50 years, possibly in the last century since Churchill brought back the Gold Standard.
Quote from: BillyStubbsTears on September 28, 2022, 09:12:01 pmQuote from: ncRover on September 28, 2022, 08:59:09 pmThe IMF didn’t have a problem with the many multiple times more money spent on trying to stop covid and grind the economy to a halt. More so than the £2bn initially lost through tax cuts, why’s that?Do you really want to know, or is this just another knee jerk anti-lockdown spasm?My point was to highlight the relatively small ratio of the tax cuts. For example 2bn in relation to 150bn energy bills support package or 32bn on track and trace.No need for the spiteful tone, I’m just trying to understand things.
Quote from: ncRover on September 28, 2022, 08:59:09 pmThe IMF didn’t have a problem with the many multiple times more money spent on trying to stop covid and grind the economy to a halt. More so than the £2bn initially lost through tax cuts, why’s that?Do you really want to know, or is this just another knee jerk anti-lockdown spasm?
The IMF didn’t have a problem with the many multiple times more money spent on trying to stop covid and grind the economy to a halt. More so than the £2bn initially lost through tax cuts, why’s that?
Quote from: SydneyRover on October 03, 2022, 03:12:30 pmQuote from: big fat yorkshire pudding on October 03, 2022, 01:45:49 pmQuote from: SydneyRover on October 03, 2022, 12:06:55 pmHow long has the labour windfall tax been a policy? longer than the government's aye?https://www.channel4.com/news/factcheck/factcheck-labour-keeps-repeating-misleading-claim-on-energy-windfall-taxI can't see what they've actually proposed as a % etc other than scrapping the capital allowance for the energy companies. Labour appear to have lots of (pretty good) policy ideas but still seem a bit light on how they'd fund them. From the mini budget there isn't that much they've actually said they'll scrap as yet.I can't actually see how the govt is going to fund anything yet which is more to the point wouldn't you agree? It caused the turmoil in the markets and forced the BoE to bail them out. It appears most economists agree, those good with numbers that is ....... a policy failure of massive proportions. It does not bode well for anyone, except an opposition trying to overturn a massive majority maybe.That's a different argument though isn't it? It could well be argued that a political game is ongoing. The tories almost setting labour up to fail. If they promise they'll balance the books then they're in for a very hard sell going forwards. For what it's worth I don't think they'll promise that, they cannot deliver it.
How the hell should I know?