Do you want to discuss boring politics? (179 Viewers)

CCFCSteve

Well-Known Member
‘Austerity’ gets banded about a lot these days but the stats don’t really back it up in terms of public spending as a % of gdp.

The real choice we’ve got is are we as a country willing to pay more for better public services ? Or for FP and others with a slightly different view, whether you want to print more money and debase the currency to cover additional government expenditure

Both will get to the same position though, are people willing to accept less in their pocket/less purchasing power for better public services. I personally would but I also expect it to be spent better than it is currently.

No party wants to have this honest discussion though
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
‘Austerity’ gets banded about a lot these days but the stats don’t really back it up in terms of % public spending per gdp.

The real choice we’ve got to have is are we as a country willing to pay more for better public services ? Or for FP and others with a slightly different view, whether you want to print more money and debase the currency to cover additional government expenditure

Both will get to the same position though, are people willing to accept less in their pocket/less purchasing power for better public services. I personally would but I also expect it to be spent better than it is currently.

No party wants to have this honest discussion though

It’s not that simple though. A lot of the cuts over the last 14 years haven’t actually saved money. The police station closures, failures to hire teachers/doctors because of the wage freeze leading to more locum/supply pay. Lack of investment in infrastructure leading to anemic growth.

I think people are going to have to have tax rises because we need to spend more on defence and because as always with the Tories there’s a massive bill to pay off especially in capital spending.

But really our issue is growth. If any of our politicians took that seriously a lot of problems would be solved. Worrying to see any mention of planning reform seemingly quietly dropped by Starmer.
 

CCFCSteve

Well-Known Member
It’s not that simple though. A lot of the cuts over the last 14 years haven’t actually saved money. The police station closures, failures to hire teachers/doctors because of the wage freeze leading to more locum/supply pay. Lack of investment in infrastructure leading to anemic growth.

I think people are going to have to have tax rises because we need to spend more on defence and because as always with the Tories there’s a massive bill to pay off especially in capital spending.

But really our issue is growth. If any of our politicians took that seriously a lot of problems would be solved. Worrying to see any mention of planning reform seemingly quietly dropped by Starmer.

Don’t disagree with a lot of that. People talk about cuts and there was a lot post financial crisis but government expenditure as % of gdp is worth looking at (UK government spending as a share of GDP 2023 | Statista).

You’ve hit the nail on the head though, we need to find ways to boost growth and productivity, that will obviously then increase the cash available for public spending. I’m not convinced that we and probably a majority of Europe, will return to higher growth economies in the short to medium term though.

Again, no party appears to have a plan or vision about how to achieve this either 🤷‍♂️
 

skybluetony176

Well-Known Member
Don’t disagree with a lot of that. People talk about cuts and there was a lot post financial crisis but government expenditure as % of gdp is worth looking at (UK government spending as a share of GDP 2023 | Statista).

You’ve hit the nail on the head though, we need to find ways to boost growth and productivity, that will obviously then increase the cash available for public spending. I’m not convinced that we and probably a majority of Europe, will return to higher growth economies in the short to medium term though.

Again, no party appears to have a plan or vision about how to achieve this either 🤷‍♂️
Some of that thought is due to our GDP struggling to recover to pre pandemic levels. IIRC it was only at the end of 2023 our GDP finally recovered to pre pandemic levels. We’re still down on 2010 as a percentage and the fact is we need to be spending more to recover from austerity.
 

Ian1779

Well-Known Member
Fiscal rules are pure politics. Labours is extremely vague “moving towards” and “by the end of five years” a lot.

The idea it’s going to cause austerity is a nonsense. For a start there’s nothing left to cut. But also austerity doesn’t actually save money. It’s just the normal boring “everyone who isn’t Corbyn is actually a Tory” meme.
Austerity doesn’t have to done just by cuts, you can cause just as much misery by simply doing nothing as the cost of everything spirals.
 

CCFCSteve

Well-Known Member
Some of that thought is due to our GDP struggling to recover to pre pandemic levels. IIRC it was only at the end of 2023 our GDP finally recovered to pre pandemic levels. We’re still down on 2010 as a percentage and the fact is we need to be spending more to recover from austerity.

Yeah, spot on. We’ve never really recovered growth levels from pre financial crisis so the percentages are skewed a bit (and why I agreed with shmmeee about growth), however, that’s why as a country we then need to decide whether we’re all willing to pay more ?

Nobody’s putting that on the table.

Last time someone tried to be honest like that was May with her ‘death tax’ or whatever it ended up being called as she tried to change social care funding. I’ve said before we then had the increase in national insurance for social care under Johnson I think, where there was uproar. People don’t like being told they’ve got to pay more but that’s the reality. They think we should have fantastic public services and someone else will pick up the tab….the billionaires…it ain’t happening
 

wingy

Well-Known Member
Ii8888
Yeah, spot on. We’ve never really recovered growth levels from pre financial crisis so the percentages are skewed a bit (and why I agreed with shmmeee about growth), however, that’s why as a country we then need to decide whether we’re all willing to pay more ?

Nobody’s putting that on the table.

Last time someone tried to be honest like that was May with her ‘death tax’ or whatever it ended up being called as she tried to change social care funding. I’ve said before we then had the increase in national insurance for social care under Johnson I think, where there was uproar. People don’t like being told they’ve got to pay more but that’s the reality. They think we should have fantastic public services and someone else will pick up the tab….the billionaires…it ain’t happening
You sound like a debate on var now with that last comment!🫣
 

clint van damme

Well-Known Member
‘Austerity’ gets banded about a lot these days but the stats don’t really back it up in terms of public spending as a % of gdp.

The real choice we’ve got is are we as a country willing to pay more for better public services ? Or for FP and others with a slightly different view, whether you want to print more money and debase the currency to cover additional government expenditure

Both will get to the same position though, are people willing to accept less in their pocket/less purchasing power for better public services. I personally would but I also expect it to be spent better than it is currently.

No party wants to have this honest discussion though

This isn't true in a lot of cases.
We've funnelled a ton of public money towards private entities who've performed badly and not provided the service they were paid to.

I've noticed a lot of spokespeople for them trying to drive the narrative you are in order to plant doubts in the minds of the public and keep themselves on the gravy train.
 

CCFCSteve

Well-Known Member
This isn't true in a lot of cases.
We've funnelled a ton of public money towards private entities who've performed badly and not provided the service they were paid to.

I've noticed a lot of spokespeople for them trying to drive the narrative you are in order to plant doubts in the minds of the public and keep themselves on the gravy train.

I agree that there’s obviously been loads of waste and I’d like to think we can find better ways of spending public monies* but I still believe that with an aging (and unhealthy) population, together with a more dangerous world, we will all need to all put more in the pot

*You sound like the Tories saying no need to spend more, it will all come from ‘efficiencies’ 😉
 

clint van damme

Well-Known Member
I agree that there’s obviously been loads of waste and I’d like to think we can find ways better spending public monies* but I still believe that with an aging (and unhealthy) population, together with a more dangerous world, we will all need to all put more in the pot

*You sound like the Tories saying no need to spend more, it will all come from ‘efficiencies’ 😉

My post definitely had that ring to it!
I agree about putting more in the pot but there's still an opportunity to stop companies siphoning off public money for profit and share dividends.
 

CCFCSteve

Well-Known Member
My post definitely had that ring to it!
I agree about putting more in the pot but there's still an opportunity to stop companies siphoning off public money for profit and share dividends.

You might be surprised but I’m as disgusted as anyone with what’s happened with the water companies (Thames conduct is outrageous) and in more recent times all the ‘covid’/PPE companies (like Mones) that take advantage of/take liberties with the public purse

I also think that a lot of the procurement teams need to sort their shit out
 

skybluetony176

Well-Known Member
Yeah, spot on. We’ve never really recovered growth levels from pre financial crisis so the percentages are skewed a bit (and why I agreed with shmmeee about growth), however, that’s why as a country we then need to decide whether we’re all willing to pay more ?

Nobody’s putting that on the table.

Last time someone tried to be honest like that was May with her ‘death tax’ or whatever it ended up being called as she tried to change social care funding. I’ve said before we then had the increase in national insurance for social care under Johnson I think, where there was uproar. People don’t like being told they’ve got to pay more but that’s the reality. They think we should have fantastic public services and someone else will pick up the tab….the billionaires…it ain’t happening
I don’t think it even needs us all to pay more, it just needs those earning the most to pay their fair share by closing tax loopholes. Let’s get everyone paying the tax due to the latter of the law rather than letting those with enough wealth deciding for themselves what’s within the “spirit” of the law. Reevaluate once we’ve reached that point. If we don’t do that the nett result will be those who can’t afford to pay clever accountants will still disproportionately pay more.

On a personal note I’d happily pay more once we’ve reached that point if needed. I suspect though it might not be needed. Scraping non dom is a start but it’s barely scratching the surface on either a personal level or a corporate level.

Unfortunately I think we’ll always be in a position where we can’t trust governments to spend it wisely. Governments just seem to be wasteful regardless of who’s in.
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
Richer people can 100% be taxed more. Wealth can be taxed better but it’s all locked up in housing so it goes straight to “Granny in £1m London flat she’s lived in all her life can’t afford to live there”. Economically correct, morally correct especially in a small country, but politically impossible.
 

CCFCSteve

Well-Known Member
Richer people can 100% be taxed more. Wealth can be taxed better but it’s all locked up in housing so it goes straight to “Granny in £1m London flat she’s lived in all her life can’t afford to live there”. Economically correct, morally correct especially in a small country, but politically impossible.

Kick granny out and tax her ? 😊

For what it’s worth I also agree that richer people can/should be taxed more but even so, I still think everyone will have to pay more for better public services in future unless someone can quickly solve the growth/productivity puzzle*

I think for parties to pretend that’s not the case is disingenuous

*AI might help but not sure how long it will take
 

rob9872

Well-Known Member
So the solution is that those who have prospered should be punished, despite already contributing more than most. Good to see communism alive and kicking on SBT 👍

Those few st the very top that you're hoping to pay more, will generate such a meagre amount yet it's suggested as a fix-all with regularity.

If services cost more and we all need to contribute then sure let's increase the pot (from everyone), but let's also have some regulation on ensuring that entire pot is spent properly. Not on administraters, not even giving more to nurses or teachers, but by improving conditions to make sure we have more nurses, doctors, teachers, police and retain them, which is hopefully more than about pay as they're (imo) generally paid reasonable money.
 

hamertime

Well-Known Member
It’s not that simple though. A lot of the cuts over the last 14 years haven’t actually saved money. The police station closures, failures to hire teachers/doctors because of the wage freeze leading to more locum/supply pay. Lack of investment in infrastructure leading to anemic growth.

I think people are going to have to have tax rises because we need to spend more on defence and because as always with the Tories there’s a massive bill to pay off especially in capital spending.

But really our issue is growth. If any of our politicians took that seriously a lot of problems would be solved. Worrying to see any mention of planning reform seemingly quietly dropped by Starmer.
Well if we wasn’t having to house and pay for hundreds of thousands of illegal immigrants we would be able to build a police station every day in this country.
 

SBT

Well-Known Member
Well if we wasn’t having to house and pay for hundreds of thousands of illegal immigrants we would be able to build a police station every day in this country.
It’s not hundreds of thousands
We don’t house or “pay for” all of them anyway
Not sure why we need a new police station every day

Other than that…
 

Ian1779

Well-Known Member
Well if we wasn’t having to house and pay for hundreds of thousands of illegal immigrants we would be able to build a police station every day in this country.
Always Sunny Reaction GIF
 

hamertime

Well-Known Member
It’s not hundreds of thousands
We don’t house or “pay for” all of them anyway
Not sure why we need a new police station every day

Other than that…
95,000 arrived in small boats in last 2 calendar years. 87% male. That’s just the ones on boats.
 

rob9872

Well-Known Member
But then we'll not have enough police to fill them and a judicial system too slow to process them into overcrowded jails. I think this idea needs just a smidgen more thought.
 

Ian1779

Well-Known Member
95,000 arrived in small boats in last 2 calendar years. 87% male. That’s just the ones on boats.
You failed to mention in your analysis that 90% of those arriving made asylum applications which they were legally entitled to do.
Which means they are not illegal immigrants, but in fact legal ones.
 

Philosoraptor

Well-Known Member
It’s not that simple though. A lot of the cuts over the last 14 years haven’t actually saved money. The police station closures, failures to hire teachers/doctors because of the wage freeze leading to more locum/supply pay. Lack of investment in infrastructure leading to anemic growth.

I think people are going to have to have tax rises because we need to spend more on defence and because as always with the Tories there’s a massive bill to pay off especially in capital spending.

But really our issue is growth. If any of our politicians took that seriously a lot of problems would be solved. Worrying to see any mention of planning reform seemingly quietly dropped by Starmer.

Can you just confirm the cause of the cuts again.

Was it 'cause Labour tanked the economy?
 

Philosoraptor

Well-Known Member
It was an economic decision. The choices were get the people that crashed the world’s banking system to pay for it or get the plebs to pick up the cost with austerity.

There was another choice Labour failed miserably with. This was to put controls on the economy when they were actually running the country.

They failed to do this.

And no plan 'B' when it all went to the wall.
 

hamertime

Well-Known Member
You failed to mention in your analysis that 90% of those arriving made asylum applications which they were legally entitled to do.
Which means they are not illegal immigrants, but in fact legal ones.
Do the maths on it dipshit, the figures probably won’t fit on your calculator. And people wonder why there is no money to
Spend on anything else but in their Infinate wisdom they think we should just let more and more people in to country to be paid for by the working public. You think you don’t recognise the country now? Wait 10 years and you will wish you’d done something about it.
 

skybluetony176

Well-Known Member
There was another choice Labour failed miserably with. This was to put controls on the economy when they were actually running the country.

They failed to do this.

And no plan 'B' when it all went to the wall.
Firstly I’m not going to say that they couldn’t have done more to protect the country from the effects of a world banking crisis caused by the toxic mortgage industry in America because they certainly could have. For instance under Blair they relaxed controls on bankers which made the UK banking more exposed than it would have been otherwise.

Secondly austerity was implemented by the Tory/Lib Dem coalition government and then continued by the tories following the next election.

Finally the fact is up until the US toxic mortgage disaster triggered a worldwide recession Labour had actually overseen the longest period of growth in the UK since records began. If you’re going to talk about the last Labour government and their record on the economy that’s part of it.
 

wingy

Well-Known Member
It was an economic decision. The choices were get the people that crashed the world’s banking system to pay for it or get the plebs to pick up the cost with austerity.
Was it or was it simply a belief that it couldn't go on, IE a loss of confidence in the market fuelled by commentators jitters?
 

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