Do you want to discuss boring politics? (31 Viewers)

D

Deleted member 9744

Guest
I find it more enjoyable to be in the office, sometimes at least, but far less productive.
 

D

Deleted member 5849

Guest
how can a factory worker make life easier while his white collar worker in the same business can by staying at home?

How will your oh so precious labour party address that?
Given the Coventrian seemed to live in a fortress / palace in finest Finham, I'd suggest car workers are at least compensated monetarily for the hassle. That's the best thing to do, pay people accordingly.
 

Grendel

Well-Known Member
Given the Coventrian seemed to live in a fortress / palace in finest Finham, I'd suggest car workers are at least compensated monetarily for the hassle. That's the best thing to do, pay people accordingly.

He made a lot of money on property development and he certainly didn’t live in a rubbish area like Finham
 

PVA

Well-Known Member
how can a factory worker make life easier while his white collar worker in the same business can by staying at home?

How will your oh so precious labour party address that?


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stupot07

Well-Known Member
Given the Coventrian seemed to live in a fortress / palace in finest Finham, I'd suggest car workers are at least compensated monetarily for the hassle. That's the best thing to do, pay people accordingly.
With over time, etc, the people I know who have worked in the factory at Jag have been paid extremely well. And they got paid for every hour they worked.

Sent from my SM-G965F using Tapatalk
 

Sky_Blue_Dreamer

Well-Known Member
Nice things that make middle class peoples lives easier where’s factory worker has to slog to work as he’s a bit thick . Trap set fell into
I know you're a Tory apologist and contrarian, but towing the line of it not being allowed because it's unfair to 'working class' people is just utter bollocks.

As has been pointed out, there are many jobs that are white-collar that don't facilitate WFH. And if you wanted a solution who about extra remuneration for those disadvantaged - pay for travel time as if at work, paid travel expenses to work, higher pay grade for the inconvenience. But instead let's just disadvantage those people that are lucky enough to be able to work from home.

Then of course there's the point that supposedly the Tories are doing more to help the environment, so what better way to do it that get more vehicles and people travelling unnecessarily.

We've got a housing shortage with houses being unaffordable, so let's get rid of unneeded office space and get more homes built in their place. All the talk of lost revenue for things like cafes/shops for people getting lunch isn't true - it would just spread the spend out and benefit small businesses in local areas as those WFH spend that cash nearer their home.

The fact is the only people that really stand to benefit from people having to be in an office are those that own commercial property. And many of those are Tories and well connected.

It's an absolute bullshit excuse spun to try and fool people into thinking the Tories are looking out for the people and create a class war to take the focus of the real problem - their property owning mates.
 

PVA

Well-Known Member
The irony is Grendel is trying to pretend he's sticking up for working class people yet he's the only one being classist by saying working class people only do manual jobs.
 

Brighton Sky Blue

Well-Known Member
The irony is Grendel is trying to pretend he's sticking up for working class people yet he's the only one being classist by saying working class people only do manual jobs.

Well I mean his job at JLR wasn’t at all related to making cars yet I assume got paid more than those on the shop floor.

Typical white collar bourgeois
 

Grendel

Well-Known Member
Oh dear Tony know copying IRA o days not very funny one liners
 

PVA

Well-Known Member
Thanks to the excellent Dan Hodges and co for this.

Funny how Beergate has gone from the most critical story of our time to vanishing off the face of the earth.


 

skybluetony176

Well-Known Member
It's just one shameful ill informed comment after another regarding the cost of living crisis with no action to actually try and solve it.

Im at the point where I think it's that bad I'll probably vote for starmer.
Haven’t heard the interview yet but apparently Martin Lewis went ballistic on the radio this morning blaming not just the government but also the energy regulator for allowing energy cost to be artificially inflated.

Anyone hear him this morning who can shed some light on the specifics?
 

PVA

Well-Known Member
It's just one shameful ill informed comment after another regarding the cost of living crisis with no action to actually try and solve it.

Im at the point where I think it's that bad I'll probably vote for starmer.

What do you mean they don't know how to solve it?

They've cracked it - just get a better job


 

PVA

Well-Known Member
Haven’t heard the interview yet but apparently Martin Lewis went ballistic on the radio this morning blaming not just the government but also the energy regulator for allowing energy cost to be artificially inflated.

Anyone hear him this morning who can shed some light on the specifics?

He's done a thread here:

 

Terry Gibson's perm

Well-Known Member
If this is true a very nice little gig she is on there.
 

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D

Deleted member 5849

Guest
What do you mean they don't know how to solve it?

They've cracked it - just get a better job



See, most of the time I avoid things like this, as it tends to be someone magnifying the bad things. But... I listened to it. And obviously I'm not the target market of that statement, but it beggars my belief that anybody with an ounce of empathy can vote for somebody who says that.

Priviliged shyster that she appears to be.
 
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skybluetony176

Well-Known Member
So contrary to the advice from the good minister today the Governor of the Bank of England is discouraging people from earning more money because it will drive inflation. We are in a mess.
 

chiefdave

Well-Known Member
So contrary to the advice from the good minister today the Governor of the Bank of England is discouraging people from earning more money because it will drive inflation. We are in a mess.
Is there not a difference between inflation because people are going mad spending on luxuries and inflation because the cost of the essentials is going thought the roof? I appreciate the end result is the same but if people can't afford food, heating etc just telling them they don't need more money doesn't seem the answer.
 

CCFCSteve

Well-Known Member
Is there not a difference between inflation because people are going mad spending on luxuries and inflation because the cost of the essentials is going thought the roof? I appreciate the end result is the same but if people can't afford food, heating etc just telling them they don't need more money doesn't seem the answer.

Yeah, what Baileys probably struggling to communicate is he’s worried about wage price spiral - because of inflation, workers demand higher wages, employers then raise their prices to cover the higher wages and so we go on and on, pushing inflation higher and higher. I’m sure he wants people to earn enough to live though

To avoid this everyone needs to play fair, which includes petrol companies not doubling their profit per litre which is what’s happening at the moment….oh and clowns like Putin not causing gas, oil, wheat prices to spiral out of control by continuing a senseless war

Bailey (and the Fed and ECB) should’ve stopped printing money and started raising interest rates a lot earlier though, mayve helped
 

David O'Day

Well-Known Member
Yeah, what Baileys probably struggling to communicate is he’s worried about wage price spiral - because of inflation, workers demand higher wages, employers then raise their prices to cover the higher wages and so we go on and on, pushing inflation higher and higher. I’m sure he wants people to earn enough to live though

To avoid this everyone needs to play fair, which includes petrol companies not doubling their profit per litre which is what’s happening at the moment….oh and clowns like Putin not causing gas, oil, wheat prices to spiral out of control by continuing a senseless war

Bailey (and the Fed and ECB) should’ve stopped printing money and started raising interest rates a lot earlier though, mayve helped

Yeah he's talking about inflationary pressures pushing up the cost of living and thus pushing up inflation.
 

duffer

Well-Known Member
Yeah he's talking about inflationary pressures pushing up the cost of living and thus pushing up inflation.

The thing is though, that this is cost-push rather than demand-pull inflation. At the moment anyway, it's not driven by higher wage demands, it's driven by rising prices primarily because of Brexit impacts, and rising energy costs.

Raising interest rates is a bit of a blunt instrument for this kind of inflation, this isn't too much money chasing too few goods so taking cash out of people's pockets is (as usual) likely to hurt those with less and (strangely enough) lead to increased wage demands. Then we might move into demand-pull scenarios, I guess.

I'd suggest that what needs to happen is for the Government to get control of the energy sector - at the moment they're profiting hugely at the expense of the entire country.

Similarly, rather than adding costs to imported goods from our largest trading partner, the EU, with a completely ideological approach, we need to get back to the low friction 'oven ready' deal that apparently people voted for.

Like every recent economic crisis, the Tories will sell this as 'we all need to tighten our belts'. In reality though, the very rich (who of course fund the Tories), will continue to increase their wealth. If the pie gets smaller they'll just expect a bigger slice.
 

chiefdave

Well-Known Member
Yeah, what Baileys probably struggling to communicate is he’s worried about wage price spiral - because of inflation, workers demand higher wages, employers then raise their prices to cover the higher wages and so we go on and on, pushing inflation higher and higher. I’m sure he wants people to earn enough to live though
But if he's worried about that how does raising interest rates help? People don't have enough money to cover the essentials, how does raising the cost of their mortgage do anything other than create more calls for wage increases, exactly what he says would be a problem.
 

CCFCSteve

Well-Known Member
But if he's worried about that how does raising interest rates help? People don't have enough money to cover the essentials, how does raising the cost of their mortgage do anything other than create more calls for wage increases, exactly what he says would be a problem.

I don’t disagree that nows probably the worst time to be raising rates (should’ve happened earlier), however, if there are inflationary elements tied to consumer spending, then they’ve got to at least try to suppress that a little and ideally get to the point where people (who can) might consider saving rather than spending/borrowing.

We’ve lived off QE and low rates for too long. Base rates at 1% and we’re struggling to get it higher without putting us in recession…that’s just crazy !

Edit - it’s a very fine balance now, not just for us/BoE but ECB and Fed, I don’t envy any of them but they have partially caused this issue to start with. I wonder if there’s other things at play here though like all of them trying to inflate away their post Covid gov debts.
 
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CCFCSteve

Well-Known Member
The thing is though, that this is cost-push rather than demand-pull inflation. At the moment anyway, it's not driven by higher wage demands, it's driven by rising prices primarily because of Brexit impacts, and rising energy costs.

Raising interest rates is a bit of a blunt instrument for this kind of inflation, this isn't too much money chasing too few goods so taking cash out of people's pockets is (as usual) likely to hurt those with less and (strangely enough) lead to increased wage demands. Then we might move into demand-pull scenarios, I guess.

I'd suggest that what needs to happen is for the Government to get control of the energy sector - at the moment they're profiting hugely at the expense of the entire country.

Similarly, rather than adding costs to imported goods from our largest trading partner, the EU, with a completely ideological approach, we need to get back to the low friction 'oven ready' deal that apparently people voted for.

Like every recent economic crisis, the Tories will sell this as 'we all need to tighten our belts'. In reality though, the very rich (who of course fund the Tories), will continue to increase their wealth. If the pie gets smaller they'll just expect a bigger slice.

I agree that the current inflation pressures are mainly caused by things outside of our control now (started with excessive QE/low rates though - this has benefitted the richest/those with assets), however, he’s worried that if wages start matching inflation it will continue to spiral

Agree that the sensible thing would be for government to do things like pressuring petrol companies like BP/Shell to reduce costs at the pump to normal profit levels, if not threaten windfall tax. If BP/Shell etc reduce their prices others would have to follow. I’m sad enough to have even emailed the treasury/Sunak to suggest this a few weeks back

They should also help the poorest with UC uplift.
 
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