Do you want to discuss boring politics? (57 Viewers)

Nick

Administrator
My work is hybrid now and has been for a couple of years, I'm one of very few people who actually goes to the office regularly.

I don't buy the idea that I'm any more productive, it still takes me the same amount of time to perform the same task. I think what a lot of the WFH increases productivity people are on about is hanging the washing out

It depends on the task I'm doing. If I am coding something I do it much better at home with some music on as opposed to in the office with the phone ringing, people coming over every 5 minutes and stopping what I'm doing.

Productivity isn't always 9-5 either, sometimes I can do something at 7 at night easily rather than trying to force it at 1PM amongst other things.
 

chiefdave

Well-Known Member
Im not sure that’s correct though Dave


Many people will be more productive, many won’t be. It depends on role, personal circumstances, office/home environment, drive, experience, IT/Comms access, commute time etc etc. Everyone’s different
Think that's looking at a subset of people WFH who are totally remote. Its a minor, but key, difference. Suspect the number of employers who genuinely don't give a fuck where in the world you are and will permanently employ you to sit by a pool in Spain working off your laptop are few and far between.

I was a 4 hour drive from my office that was deliberate on my employers part as they have clients locally. I can imagine the response if they said they were coming up here for a meeting or when I was asked to go to a client site was to say no because I wasn't at home.

Don't think anyone is suggesting forcing people to work every day of the year from home in total isolation is a good thing.
 

wingy

Well-Known Member
My work is hybrid now and has been for a couple of years, I'm one of very few people who actually goes to the office regularly.

I don't buy the idea that I'm any more productive, it still takes me the same amount of time to perform the same task. I think what a lot of the WFH increases productivity people are on about is hanging the washing out
That's so old hat washing, hanging it out?
 

Ian1779

Well-Known Member
Given the issues you have identified, where are the 6,500 extra teachers, funded by VAT on private education, going to come from?
They’re not going to as it stands. So one of the following is going to have to happen to even make that number which is miles short of what is needed.

a) the entire amount will come from abroad, such as Canada, SA, USA or Caribbean - this is currently subject to a big push via school sponsorship
b) there will need to be heavy financial incentives for entering the profession akin to previous ‘golden handshakes’
c) they find some way to have a serious look at working schedules/workload and try and entice back those that have left previously
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
They’re not going to as it stands. So one of the following is going to have to happen to even make that number which is miles short of what is needed.

a) the entire amount will come from abroad, such as Canada, SA, USA or Caribbean - this is currently subject to a big push via school sponsorship
b) there will need to be heavy financial incentives for entering the profession akin to previous ‘golden handshakes’
c) they find some way to have a serious look at working schedules/workload and try and entice back those that have left previously

They should absolutely bring back golden handshakes.
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member

CCFCSteve

Well-Known Member
They should absolutely bring back golden handshakes.

Been saying for years there should be a bursary and/or refund system for tuition fees for certain subjects and jobs as part of a wider industrial strategy.

For certain public sector jobs ie teachers or nurses it could be part of an agreement to gradually write off tuition fees after years served. More years you serve in public sector, more written off

I think there is already some support for nurses but more just grants/bursary, no tie in which doesn’t make sense to me
 
D

Deleted member 5849

Guest
Been saying for years there should be a bursary and/or refund system for tuition fees for certain subjects and jobs as part of a wider industrial strategy.

For certain public sector jobs ie teachers or nurses it could be part of an agreement to gradually write off tuition fees after years served. More years you serve in public sector, more written off

I think there is already some support for nurses but more just grants/bursary, no tie in which doesn’t make sense to me
They did at one stage fund the pgce in certain subjects where they needed people. I hadn't even realised they'd stopped that!
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
Been saying for years there should be a bursary and/or refund system for tuition fees for certain subjects and jobs as part of a wider industrial strategy.

For certain public sector jobs ie teachers or nurses it could be part of an agreement to gradually write off tuition fees after years served. More years you serve in public sector, more written off

I think there is already some support for nurses but more just grants/bursary, no tie in which doesn’t make sense to me

They used to pay off student loans just before I started teaching. Seems like a no brainer to me: come and teach for X years, get some or all of your loan forgiven. The cost can’t be that much surely considering how few people actually pay them all anyway.
 

wingy

Well-Known Member
Promise to keep winter fuel allowance by many Labour MPs prove to be Labour lies. What next? The promise to reduce fuel costs? The triple lock?
I think the previous govt have to explain the the shortfall in all truth,uncosted spending seems to have been the byword for a lot of this, I don't think Jeremy Hunt queried a lot of it when interviewed on BBC, black hole of £35b sounds scarily similar to Truss's budget doesn't it?
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
I think the previous govt have to explain the the shortfall in all truth,uncosted spending seems to have been the byword for a lot of this, I don't think Jeremy Hunt queried a lot of it when interviewed on BBC, black hole of £35b sounds scarily similar to Truss's budget doesn't it?

They knew they were losing since Truss and just piled everything up for the next government. People have been calling this out for years.
 

wingy

Well-Known Member
They knew they were losing since Truss and just piled everything up for the next government. People have been calling this out for years.
It's scary really almost all numbers for each disaster are scarily around the total of the predicted loss to our economy of Brexit?
 

MalcSB

Well-Known Member
I think the previous govt have to explain the the shortfall in all truth,uncosted spending seems to have been the byword for a lot of this, I don't think Jeremy Hunt queried a lot of it when interviewed on BBC, black hole of £35b sounds scarily similar to Truss's budget doesn't it?
Most of the shortfall has been explained by what Reeves has agreed to in the past couple of weeks,
 

MalcSB

Well-Known Member
They knew they were losing since Truss and just piled everything up for the next government. People have been calling this out for years.
Rubbish. Like saying the economy Is in the worst state since 1945. Or that it has all come as a surprise.
 

fernandopartridge

Well-Known Member
They used to pay off student loans just before I started teaching. Seems like a no brainer to me: come and teach for X years, get some or all of your loan forgiven. The cost can’t be that much surely considering how few people actually pay them all anyway.
Yeah, let's be honest the 'cost' of the student loan is practically written off as soon as it is issued.
 

duffer

Well-Known Member
Much as I want (and we need) this Labour government to do well, Reeves still comes over as a cheap Thatcher tribute act to me.

Qualifying for Pension Credit seems like a remarkably low bar to me.

My mum didn't qualify and all she had was the State Pension, £150 quid or so a month from a private pension, and a tiny maisonette, on which she was still paying a mortgage. The winter fuel allowance was a big deal for her, and people like her (of which there are many).

Looks a lot like the 'a' word to me, does this. Austerity. It's the inevitable result of taking on Tory fiscal dogma.

When we start talking seriously about redistribution from the wealthy rather than endlessly punishing the poor, I'll start believing a bit more in this Government...

 

fernandopartridge

Well-Known Member
Much as I want (and we need) this Labour government to do well, Reeves still comes over as a cheap Thatcher tribute act to me.

Qualifying for Pension Credit seems like a remarkably low bar to me.

My mum didn't qualify and all she had was the State Pension, £150 quid or so a month from a private pension, and a tiny maisonette, on which she was still paying a mortgage. The winter fuel allowance was a big deal for her, and people like her (of which there are many).

Looks a lot like the 'a' word to me, does this. Austerity. It's the inevitable result of taking on Tory fiscal dogma.

When we start talking seriously about redistribution from the wealthy rather than endlessly punishing the poor, I'll start believing a bit more in this Government...


Removal of the allowance is literally removing the equivalent amount from being spent in the real economy. As if we don't have enough being spent on deadweight hygiene needs like housing and utilities.
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
Much as I want (and we need) this Labour government to do well, Reeves still comes over as a cheap Thatcher tribute act to me.

Qualifying for Pension Credit seems like a remarkably low bar to me.

My mum didn't qualify and all she had was the State Pension, £150 quid or so a month from a private pension, and a tiny maisonette, on which she was still paying a mortgage. The winter fuel allowance was a big deal for her, and people like her (of which there are many).

Looks a lot like the 'a' word to me, does this. Austerity. It's the inevitable result of taking on Tory fiscal dogma.

When we start talking seriously about redistribution from the wealthy rather than endlessly punishing the poor, I'll start believing a bit more in this Government...


It is austerity. They backed themselves into a corner on tax, all that’s left is austerity. Should have just reversed the NI cuts really.
 

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