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A big day for the LDs and the PM – politicalbetting.com

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  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,182
    TOPPING said:

    You mean the larger businesses in which, say, your pension fund is invested.
    Essentially, yes.

    Someone has to pay, and rather it be me (and my pension fund) than small business owners like Cyclefree’s daughter.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,482
    One other pandemic finance issue which has received little attention is the scale of fraud relating to the 'bounce back' loans.

    The government always expected to make a loss on these loans, since some of the genuine businesses which borrowed would never be able to pay the money back. It will likely make a loss as great (somewhere around £8bn, I think) on fraudulent loans, where (for example) shell companies have borrowed money and disappeared overnight.
  • NerysHughesNerysHughes Posts: 3,375
    Todays healdines from SA News 24

    https://www.news24.com/

    Despite them being 3 weeks ahead of us and in the midst of the peak of Omicron, it only makes the 3rd item, after racisim in a school and a story about Zuma. And the story about Omicron is only that their alert level will remain at level 1.

  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,182
    rkrkrk said:

    I think you'll find that one Lib Dem MP 5 years ago once voiced doubts about a fantastic opportunity for rural broadband or something and therefore the party is forever tainted.
    Yes the general sniffy dismissal of the Lib Dems is unfathomable.
  • TOPPING said:

    You mean the larger businesses in which, say, your pension fund is invested.
    Support should only be provided to the small business sector, and it is not for the government to subsidise pension funds
  • TimTTimT Posts: 6,468

    It is quite obvious what Big G meant.
    My business (a single proprietor LLC) has no shareholders. So Topping is wrong, plain and simple. Of course, I have stakeholders, but not shareholders.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668

    Essentially, yes.

    Someone has to pay, and rather it be me (and my pension fund) than small business owners like Cyclefree’s daughter.
    Sounds good. You would penalise millions of people via a hit to their future wealth. Understand.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,185
    edited December 2021
    moonshine said:

    If Sunak’s absence this week is really because he is on holiday in California, then that is sufficiently poor form that it should exclude him from the pending leadership election and call into question his fitness for high office at all.

    Perhaps I’m giving him the benefit of the doubt too much, but I doubt the story.
    No he's on a trade mission to California, and in order to save the Exchequer hotel costs is staying at his own expense in his holiday home in California.

    This also allowed him to abstain from the Labour Party Lockdown vote on Wednesday. So he was full square behind the CRG.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,482

    This was an existing government business commitment and your cynicism is getting the better of you
    Or your credulity, you.
    Equally possible, at the very least.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    Nigelb said:

    This is an old article (2015(), but I don't think its essential critique of the sale of student loan debt has altered much. Basically when the government has sld off debt tranches, it has replaced state financing with more expensive private financing, while retaining the risk, purely in return for cash now rather than later.
    https://www.lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v37/n05/andrew-mcgettigan/cash-today
    That seems eerily similar to the PFI nonesense from two decades ago. Future governments are going to end up writing off billions, in inflated student loan amounts outstanding.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668

    Support should only be provided to the small business sector, and it is not for the government to subsidise pension funds
    What if a small business owner, say @Cyclefree's daughter, has a SIPP. Penalise her?
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,673
    If there's a market on turnout tonight, i'd go for really low. You're an NS voter who usually goes Tory but think they're a mess; you've barely heard of the LibDem leader and wouldn't vote Labour if they paid you. You're so scared of the pandemic that you hesitate to walk round a supermarket. It's December. The moment to visit a polling station? Pffft.
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 14,280

    France banning travel to and from the UK from Saturday without a compelling reason

    I sold my place in France because it was just getting too difficult to get there and back. If the pando is ever over (and if I survive it) we'll buy again but somewhere in Pyrénées-Orientales this time.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,482

    Yes the general sniffy dismissal of the Lib Dems is unfathomable.
    It is the understandable attitude of the two large parties (and their supporters) in a FPTP system, and therefore assiduously cultivated.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668
    TimT said:

    My business (a single proprietor LLC) has no shareholders. So Topping is wrong, plain and simple. Of course, I have stakeholders, but not shareholders.
    The stakeholders or members in many regards look for all the world like shareholders, save for an ability to, er, limit liability.
  • kjhkjh Posts: 12,487
    edited December 2021

    Support should only be provided to the small business sector, and it is not for the government to subsidise pension funds
    Agree but Govts have been pretty good at raiding pension funds as a hidden form of taxation on the individual in the past and the consequences of those raids have been devastating for many. Ask anyone in the FAS or PPF who have had their pensions destroyed.
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 65,011
    edited December 2021
    TOPPING said:

    What if a small business owner, say @Cyclefree's daughter, has a SIPP. Penalise her?
    Pension finds managers are paid enormous sums to ensure maximum returns and it is upto them to invest wisely and not expect handouts from HMG in times of crisis

    @Cyclefree daughter is a small business owner that should receive targeted support for her business to survive
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,482
    Sandpit said:

    That seems eerily similar to the PFI nonesense from two decades ago. Future governments are going to end up writing off billions, in inflated student loan amounts outstanding.
    Well it's not quite the same, since student debts were never intended to be fully paid back from the outset, while PFI contracts (in theory) were supposed to self finance.

    It's an ever more obvious nonsense, though, since the private investors take little or no risk, and the administration of the loans stays with the Student Finance Company.
  • DavidL said:

    The need for more steps to slow the speed of spread of this variant is a matter of arithmetic. We need to flatten the curve once again or the NHS will be overwhelmed. Whitty seems to think its probably too late to avoid this. His judgment has been pretty good to date. Its now a question of how bad, not good or bad.

    I agree with @Cyclefree that these necessary steps should have created support as earlier lockdowns did but I am also conscious that the younger generation that have been shafted by the old in so many ways are going to be left with the problem of repaying this debt too.
    If its too late, its too late, so don't worry about it and live your life.

    I've seen a few people say that people aren't worried because of "government measures" they're worried because they don't want to have to isolate over Christmas. Well guess what: Isolation is a government measure too! As are the ramping up of tests etc

    In the summer Chris Whitty wisely said we're all going to get Covid. The notion of "controlling the spread" post-vaccinations is a wicked and harmful policy the outcome of which we're seeing. We've never told people with a cold or cough or similar in the past that they need to isolate.

    We should be abolishing isolation even for the infectious and telling people they don't need to take tests either. If people get infected, they get infected, then either the vaccines work or they don't. And if people are unvaccinated, they roll the dice.

    We need to live with the virus. Not try and control its spread or eradicate its spread or anything else. Let the vaccines do their job and let people live.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,182
    TOPPING said:

    Sounds good. You would penalise millions of people via a hit to their future wealth. Understand.
    Actually, if I was the govt I would just borrow more. But penalising your fat pension fund is the next best option.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668

    Pension finds managers are paid enormous sums to ensure maximum returns and it is upto them to invest wisely and not expect handouts from HMG in times of crisis

    @Cyclefree daughter is a small business owner that should receive targeted support for her business to survive
    While her pension on the other hand takes a hit.
  • boulayboulay Posts: 6,085
    Dear Cyclefree, if you would like to raise your blood pressure even more than it probably is right now read the link below!!!

    Never seen such a disgraceful case of the legal profession protecting one of their own!

    https://www.bailiwickexpress.com/jsy/news/lawyer-slammed-inappropriate-response-neighbourly-dispute/#.YbsFzhanyEc
  • DavidL said:

    I think that is a little simplistic but did you hear the Reith lecture yesterday about the implications of AI for work? It was thought provoking but the central thrust is that the problem for the last 20-30 years has been that the share of profits taken by capital as opposed to labour has been increasing resulting in stagnant wages. AI is going to accelerate this trend by making labour far less competitive. Those with capital will gain but how does society keep going? UBI is one possibility but it is going to be a tricky transition.
    I didn't hear it but the premise sounds plausible. I do worry that the increasing inequality and divisions I've witnessed during my life are only going to gather pace for my children. Add in the climate crisis and it's quite a toxic brew.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668

    Actually, if I was the govt I would just borrow more. But penalising your fat pension fund is the next best option.
    It's not my fat pension fund (why fat?), it is @Cyclefree's daughter's SIPP.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668
    Dura_Ace said:

    I sold my place in France because it was just getting too difficult to get there and back. If the pando is ever over (and if I survive it) we'll buy again but somewhere in Pyrénées-Orientales this time.
    Power to the People.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,185

    A helpful UK tweeter on COVID one of Nature's "10 people who helped shape science in 2021":

    https://www.nature.com/immersive/d41586-021-03621-0/index.html#section-EQqzpXoePk

    They've missed off Boris? Some mistake surely. I saw him in a lab coat.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,182
    Nigelb said:

    It is the understandable attitude of the two large parties (and their supporters) in a FPTP system, and therefore assiduously cultivated.
    Oh noes! Wera Hobhouse (who?) said something daft about 5G!!!!!

    Cool.
    Let me introduce you to Chope, Swayne, Bridgen, Burgon, Webbe, etc etc.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,541

    Why is France restricting travel from UK......

    An update on the distribution of variants in each country, based on GISAID data up to December 13.
    Blue is delta, Red is omicron




    https://twitter.com/redouad/status/1471405946018701313?s=20

    To answer that you need to know what restrictions have been imposed elsewhere, and when, by France.

    The Daily Wail is not going to report comparative restrictions on travelling from Ch to Fr.

    Though there's a clear Muppetry of the Macron element here.

    Why not email the French Embassy, and report back?
  • Why is France restricting travel from UK......

    An update on the distribution of variants in each country, based on GISAID data up to December 13.
    Blue is delta, Red is omicron


    https://i.imgur.com/S7M0FrN.png

    https://twitter.com/redouad/status/1471405946018701313?s=20

    Well given the way our government, opposition and media are acting so hysterically you'd understandably think we were undergoing some Omicron Armageddon right now if you glanced at our media.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,182
    Farooq said:

    Examine the language you used: "the housing ladder".
    In what sense could "housing" be a "ladder"? Is it? Should it be?
    What do you mean, “could”?

    It served well enough for my grandparents, then my parents, and then me.

    “Should” is an interesting question, but space does not permit a proper answer.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,182
    TOPPING said:

    It's not my fat pension fund (why fat?), it is @Cyclefree's daughter's SIPP.
    Don’t be an arse.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,690

    If its too late, its too late, so don't worry about it and live your life.

    I've seen a few people say that people aren't worried because of "government measures" they're worried because they don't want to have to isolate over Christmas. Well guess what: Isolation is a government measure too! As are the ramping up of tests etc

    In the summer Chris Whitty wisely said we're all going to get Covid. The notion of "controlling the spread" post-vaccinations is a wicked and harmful policy the outcome of which we're seeing. We've never told people with a cold or cough or similar in the past that they need to isolate.

    We should be abolishing isolation even for the infectious and telling people they don't need to take tests either. If people get infected, they get infected, then either the vaccines work or they don't. And if people are unvaccinated, they roll the dice.

    We need to live with the virus. Not try and control its spread or eradicate its spread or anything else. Let the vaccines do their job and let people live.
    The issue there is that omicron is so infectious we need (at least some) people with it to isolate as otherwise it's going to swamp the NHS.

    Now it's possible that omicron is so slight that it won't result in the NHS being swamped but we just don't know that today.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,115

    My Dad has decided to come and meet us for lunch in Bath on Sunday, which is nice, but we are having a tussle over whether we will eat inside or outside. It will be quite cold, but he's coming from Lambeth, which had an enormous spike in cases yesterday.
    Make him sit outside and talk to him through the window. 😉
  • Farooq said:

    Examine the language you used: "the housing ladder".
    In what sense could "housing" be a "ladder"? Is it? Should it be?
    Yes it was a ladder for previous generations.

    Young people might get a smaller starter home, then move up to a bigger home when they have kids, then move into a bigger home when they're well off. Younger people would follow them up the ladder.

    Then the ladder stopped working.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,690

    If there's a market on turnout tonight, i'd go for really low. You're an NS voter who usually goes Tory but think they're a mess; you've barely heard of the LibDem leader and wouldn't vote Labour if they paid you. You're so scared of the pandemic that you hesitate to walk round a supermarket. It's December. The moment to visit a polling station? Pffft.

    It's an election that is going to be determined by the postal votes.

    So in that case probably a slight Tory win
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,285
    edited December 2021

    Darkage’s post upthread is critical.

    The “Great British Dream” is dead. This is by no means solely a British problem, but I think it is probably worse here.

    When I talk to 20-somethings, unless their parents are loaded, they have no hope of ever getting on the housing ladder.

    Class advancement has utterly collapsed.

    University education has become a bizarre fiscal imposition, you can’t *not* do it (because you want a “middle class job”), but you can’t afford to do it, either.

    I was born poor and came to this country with nothing, and I regret with all my heart that my journey is now nigh-on impossible.

    MEANWHILE,

    My top end art gallerist friend has “never been busier” because her wealthy patrons have done so well during Covid and need to diversify their asset base.

    A society cannot last forever if the stories it tells itself (work hard and prosper!) are false.

    I agree about house ownership. And the main reason is the fact the population has increased by 10 million over the last 20 years or so, whereas in the 70s, 80s and 90s it hardly increased at all, which meant house prices remained affordable. Ironically, the people who can't afford property are the ones most likely to support an increase in the population.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,115
    TimT said:

    My business (a single proprietor LLC) has no shareholders. So Topping is wrong, plain and simple. Of course, I have stakeholders, but not shareholders.
    My business is a one man band, unincorporated and with no shareholders. Its a crazy way to operate really. Unlimited liability, incredibly inefficient tax wise and no goodwill to sell on at the end of it. Defo wrong career choice somewhere.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,879
    On current polls the Tories should get about 40-45% in North Shropshire on UNS, so even despite being a Leave seat they will still see a significant swing against them. However that does not mean they will lose it necessarily unless the vast majority of Labour voters tactically vote LD. In the end it may be the fact that it was Labour 2nd in the seat in 2019 not the LDs, despite the latter making the biggest challenge, that will save the Tory candidate. Not the fact it was a solid but overwhelmingly Leave seat.

    If the Tories lose the seat Boris could face a VONC in the next few weeks, though I think he would narrowly survive it for now which would keep him safe for a year. Longer term though more important for his survival will be the booster programme proving effective
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,780
    edited December 2021

    Oh noes! Wera Hobhouse (who?) said something daft about 5G!!!!!

    Cool.
    Let me introduce you to Chope, Swayne, Bridgen, Burgon, Webbe, etc etc.
    @Farooq - I'm a moaner, and I've repeatedly congratulated the Lib Dems on voting against (including on this thread).
    Doesn't stop me complaining about some of their dafter obsessions but at the moment for me they are the most credible of the parties.
  • eek said:

    The issue there is that omicron is so infectious we need (at least some) people with it to isolate as otherwise it's going to swamp the NHS.

    Now it's possible that omicron is so slight that it won't result in the NHS being swamped but we just don't know that today.
    If you believe the figures the government are spouting then everyone in the entire country would have had Omicron by Christmas Day anyway. So either the current doubling rate will slow down as it runs out of hosts, or its too late to do anything either way, so why trash the economy?

    But realistically its not going to spread that much since not everyone in the country is going to get infected anyway, almost everyone has some form of immunity and not everyone with immunity becomes a breakthrough case so people are illogically losing their minds over nothing.

    If we'd abolished testing and isolation requirements over the summer then even more people would have had natural immunity by now.
  • Morning again!

    Reading the criticism of my (and Big G's) generation earlier in the thread, especially how we had, financially, thrown our grandchildren under the bus I was struck by a couple of thoughts. The generation born just before and just after WWII were the young people who marched at Aldermaston to Ban the Bomb, who backed the likes of Peter Hain in fighting apartheid. We looked for a bright new future.
    We were part of the Liberal Revival in the mid 60's. We were Flower Power.

    As the theme tune to a popular programme ran "Oh, what happened to us?..... What became of the people we used to be?"

    I am guessing that many if not most of the people who were involved in things like Aldermaston or the anti apartheid movement have retained their political idealism. My parents certainly have, and I think you have too. But they were only ever a small minority of their generation, and remain so. Those in the apolitical centre have drifted rightwards, though, that is for sure.
  • TimTTimT Posts: 6,468
    TOPPING said:

    The stakeholders or members in many regards look for all the world like shareholders, save for an ability to, er, limit liability.
    But you used the word shareholder.
  • TimT said:

    But you used the word shareholder.
    Don't LLC owners technically own 100% of the shares?
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,050
    Labour proper gunning for treasury this morning… turned up with their boots on finally.

    10:30am - UQ - Pat McFadden MP – To ask the Chancellor of the Exchequer if he will make a statement on government support for business given the advice to “de-prioritise social contacts”.
    https://twitter.com/mrharrycole/status/1471401729891905537
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,050
    "Learning to live with covid, cannot mean pretending life can be exactly as it was before. The public gets this. Only the ruling party seems to struggle"

    How supposedly libertarian Tories are blocking the steps that can keep society open.

    https://www.ft.com/content/cb2ed249-1ee2-43bc-bb67-7329df84baa5 https://twitter.com/robertshrimsley/status/1471407403723800577/photo/1
  • TimTTimT Posts: 6,468
    DavidL said:

    My business is a one man band, unincorporated and with no shareholders. Its a crazy way to operate really. Unlimited liability, incredibly inefficient tax wise and no goodwill to sell on at the end of it. Defo wrong career choice somewhere.
    In the US, the benefit of this single proprietor LLC is limited liability coupled with the ability to file one tax return for business(es) and personal, offsetting profits and losses across the whole.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,182
    Andy_JS said:

    I agree about house ownership. And the main reason is the fact the population has increased by 10 million over the last 20 years or so, whereas in the 70s, 80s and 90s it hardly increased at all, which meant house prices remained affordable. Ironically, the people who can't afford property are the ones most likely to support an increase in the population.
    That’s a reason (for high house prices), but by no means the only reason and probably not even the main one.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,879
    DavidL said:

    As I have said several times western Europe is becoming a peaceful, prosperous, geopolitically irrelevant backwater and that may well prove to be a very nice place to live. Surveys like that suggest it will suit most people just fine even if those with egos like Macron want to strut the world stage rather more.
    That may describe the likes of Switzerland and Norway or even most individual western European nations but it does not describe western Europe as a whole. As a whole western Europe is economically bigger than the rest of the planet except the US and China and militarily as well it needs to act as one coherent unit to contain Putin and jihadi terrorism and the US also needs the UK and ideally France and Germany etc too as well as Australia, Japan, South Korea, India etc to contain Xi's China.
  • Scott_xP said:

    Labour proper gunning for treasury this morning… turned up with their boots on finally.

    10:30am - UQ - Pat McFadden MP – To ask the Chancellor of the Exchequer if he will make a statement on government support for business given the advice to “de-prioritise social contacts”.
    https://twitter.com/mrharrycole/status/1471401729891905537

    Shame Labour couldn't be arsed to make this a pre-condition of voting with the government two days ago. Bloody shitheads.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668

    Don’t be an arse.
    Which bit have I got wrong? Cyclefree's daughter's SIPP will take a hit. I'm sure I don't have to explain the effect of compounding which will mean that a hit now means that the eventual hit to her wealth by the time she comes to draw down on the pension will be substantial.
  • Scott_xP said:

    "Learning to live with covid, cannot mean pretending life can be exactly as it was before. The public gets this. Only the ruling party seems to struggle"

    How supposedly libertarian Tories are blocking the steps that can keep society open.

    https://www.ft.com/content/cb2ed249-1ee2-43bc-bb67-7329df84baa5 https://twitter.com/robertshrimsley/status/1471407403723800577/photo/1

    Learning to live with Covid means to live precisely as life was before, but with vaccines.

    Get over Covid. Its just a virus, we have vaccines. Its going to spread, get over it already.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,115
    TimT said:

    In the US, the benefit of this single proprietor LLC is limited liability coupled with the ability to file one tax return for business(es) and personal, offsetting profits and losses across the whole.
    Sounds great. I reckon if I was allowed to incorporate I would be able to save something like £20k a year in tax. I might even have a pension worth the name.
  • kjhkjh Posts: 12,487
    We have some weird posts here re pension funds. Re the various posts:

    Defined Contribution funds are for most people not fat, they are for most very, very modest and usually not enough.

    Just because a fund manager maybe well paid does not mean that someone's small pension fund should be clobbered. On that logic clobber the fund manager not the fund.

    Young people are investing in pensions as well so clobbering those does not help them.

    Retired and near retired people can't do anything about restoring their pension if you do clobber it.

    The history of Gordon Brown and the devastation he caused on pension funds and thousands of people's lives who had their retirement destroyed should be a lesson we should never have to learn again.

    As some of you may know I am involved in the campaigns to try and help some of these individuals, many of whom have now died or living on o much less than they expected in their 80s and 90s.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668
    TimT said:

    But you used the word shareholder.
    They are owners of the LLC and hence shareholders is appropriate to use.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,690
    Andy_JS said:

    I agree about house ownership. And the main reason is the fact the population has increased by 10 million over the last 20 years or so, whereas in the 70s, 80s and 90s it hardly increased at all, which meant house prices remained affordable. Ironically, the people who can't afford property are the ones most likely to support an increase in the population.
    You have to be careful here because there are 2 distinct phases in house price increases (up North it's clear because we only got the first one).

    From 1999 to 2004 as the maximum amount that could be lent changed from 3+1 income to 3-4.5* joint income, house prices boomed in price.

    Since 2005 onwards - house prices have reflected population growth relative to housing supply. Which means round here house prices remained static from 2004 to about the end of 2020 when they started increasing again.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,879

    Mass property ownership was only feasible because decades of social democracy had flattened the income and wealth distribution. Now, decades of Thatcherism have led to an increasing concentration of wealth. In other words, mass home ownership and popular share ownership were only transitory phases. The real Tory dream is the rich man in his castle, the poor man at his gate, and that is where we are heading.
    Over 2/3 of the UK population still own the property in which theyl ive, either outright or with a mortgage. 100 years ago most of the population rented. The Tory dream is still that the majority own their own homes and many get shares too as that is the most likely way to make them vote Tory eg the Tories did not get 10 consecutive years in power since universal suffrage until the expansion of property ownership and housebuilding under Macmillan and they then extended that after Thatcher endabled more to buy their their own council homes from 1979-1997.

  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,115

    I didn't hear it but the premise sounds plausible. I do worry that the increasing inequality and divisions I've witnessed during my life are only going to gather pace for my children. Add in the climate crisis and it's quite a toxic brew.
    Its worth a listen. The one last week on AI and warfare was somewhat scarier but only in a superficial kind of way. This one indicates the kind of challenges that we are going to inevitably face as a society (before the robots classify us as vermin and wipe us all out).
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,683
    algarkirk said:

    Only two predictions, neither with much confidence,

    The Tories will win NS.

    That result will buy Boris time until sometime in January.
    I also fancy the Cons to hold on in NS but, regardless, I don't see Johnson going anytime soon. You can get 1.75 on him still to be PM at the next Tory Party Conf - that's real value imo.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,115
    So, this "we will take the wickets at dusk" theory....
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668
    kjh said:

    We have some weird posts here re pension funds. Re the various posts:

    Defined Contribution funds are for most people not fat, they are for most very, very modest and usually not enough.

    Just because a fund manager maybe well paid does not mean that someone's small pension fund should be clobbered. On that logic clobber the fund manager not the fund.

    Young people are investing in pensions as well so clobbering those does not help them.

    Retired and near retired people can't do anything about restoring their pension if you do clobber it.

    The history of Gordon Brown and the devastation he caused on pension funds and thousands of people's lives who had their retirement destroyed should be a lesson we should never have to learn again.

    As some of you may know I am involved in the campaigns to try and help some of these individuals, many of whom have now died or living on o much less than they expected in their 80s and 90s.

    I mean it's not as though we are stating something extraordinary but "fat pension fund" just like "debt" are words that are flung around by those who don't bother or don't want to understand what they are really saying.
  • DavidL said:

    So, this "we will take the wickets at dusk" theory....

    We won't even be taking the new ball at dusk.
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,396
    Foxy said:

    Yes, this time tomorrow we will be talking of how the Tory won, as if that was a great feat in one of the bluest bits of Shire Leaverstan.
    I'm afraid so. I think many of us who live and work in cities will find the attitudes in the vox pop unfamiliar. It reminded me of trips to the newsagent in Grasmere where there are two piles of Newspapers on display. The Telegraph and yesterday's Telegraph
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,285
    England restricted Australia to 45 in the first session. Hasn't done them much good though.
  • darkagedarkage Posts: 5,398
    eek said:

    In planning, most local councils now have to take on contractors because it's simply not worth doing the job for the money they get paid. Mrs Eek was on £27,000 or so when she left planning in 2004, returning in 2018 (if you don't believe in God or freak events the story of how she returned is implausible). She is now on £35,000 doing a more senior job. No one is going to work for that money especially down south.

    As for student loans - as I pointed out to twin B, unless you can pay the entire debt off there is zero point paying any of it of. The money we saved for her will eventually be a housing deposit and (if I can afford it) a monthly sub to cover some of her repayment costs.
    I live in the south east. The reality is that there just aren't that many jobs that pay above the mid 20k range. Even once you ascend past that point, the taxation plus student loan starts to hit badly.

    I started in the public sector in 2007 at 31k in an entry level role, and got to 49k in 2020, in a role touted as the pinnacle of my profession. It often involved working 6 days a week, for 12 hours a day, making extremely difficult decisions with little support, for which I will essentially be liable for the rest of my life, in organisations that are increasingly subject to political interference on staffing matters; and have a habit of hanging former staff out to dry.

    In the end, I came to conclude that I was being taken for a fool by the government, and that there are far easier ways to make £3000 per month after tax. That has turned out to be true.
  • Warner gone! 95
  • eekeek Posts: 29,690
    kinabalu said:

    I also fancy the Cons to hold on in NS but, regardless, I don't see Johnson going anytime soon. You can get 1.75 on him still to be PM at the next Tory Party Conf - that's real value imo.
    What is the definition of at - when the conference begins or when it ends?

    I ask because one plausible scenario is that Boris goes after ensuring the vote takes him past August.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,285
    HYUFD said:

    On current polls the Tories should get about 40-45% in North Shropshire on UNS, so even despite being a Leave seat they will still see a significant swing against them. However that does not mean they will lose it necessarily unless the vast majority of Labour voters tactically vote LD. In the end it may be the fact that it was Labour 2nd in the seat in 2019 not the LDs, despite the latter making the biggest challenge, that will save the Tory candidate. Not the fact it was a solid but overwhelmingly Leave seat.

    If the Tories lose the seat Boris could face a VONC in the next few weeks, though I think he would narrowly survive it for now which would keep him safe for a year. Longer term though more important for his survival will be the booster programme proving effective

    Who are your first and second choices for Tory leader if Boris Johnson does leave office soon?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,879
    DavidL said:

    Its worth a listen. The one last week on AI and warfare was somewhat scarier but only in a superficial kind of way. This one indicates the kind of challenges that we are going to inevitably face as a society (before the robots classify us as vermin and wipe us all out).
    Which is why I am very wary about how AI is conducted, otherwise you end up creating a monster you cannot control (albeit in all likelihood if that was the outcome the robots would eventually end up destroying themselves too)
  • Alphabet_SoupAlphabet_Soup Posts: 3,577
    edited December 2021
    DavidL said:

    Its worth a listen. The one last week on AI and warfare was somewhat scarier but only in a superficial kind of way. This one indicates the kind of challenges that we are going to inevitably face as a society (before the robots classify us as vermin and wipe us all out).
    On the topics of AI and UBI, Kurt Vonnegut Jr wrote a scifi novel, Player Piano, as long ago as 1952, anticipating in striking detail some of the issues that haunt us today. One 'interesting' prospect was warfare between multinational corporations after state governments had all failed.

    Edit: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Player_Piano_(novel)
  • London the most religious, but least Christian region of E&W:

    London had the lowest percentage of people reporting No religion
    The percentage of the population who reported No religion ranged from an estimated 29.0% in London to 47.3% in Wales in 2019.

    People with a religious affiliation other than Christian accounted for over 25% of London’s population, compared with an estimated 10.6% of the overall population. Around one in seven people in London (14.3%) were Muslim. This percentage is higher than other regions, with the next most common regions being the West Midlands, Yorkshire and The Humber and North West (with 8.6%, 6.6% and 6.3% Muslim, respectively).

    The North East, South West, and Wales were the least religiously diverse regions, with over 95% of their populations Christian or with No religion.


    https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/populationandmigration/populationestimates/articles/populationestimatesbyethnicgroupandreligionenglandandwales/2019
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,570
    edited December 2021
    Even if Australia win this series it will be a tainted victory because they Aussies have let that fucking cheat Steve Smith captain them.

    It's like letting Harold Shipman run a care home or Boris Johnson becoming a marriage counsellor.

    It's just not cricket.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,533
    edited December 2021
    HYUFD said:

    Over 2/3 of the UK population still own the property in which theyl ive, either outright or with a mortgage. 100 years ago most of the population rented. The Tory dream is still that the majority own their own homes and many get shares too as that is the most likely way to make them vote Tory eg the Tories did not get 10 consecutive years in power since universal suffrage until the expansion of property ownership and housebuilding under Macmillan and they then extended that after Thatcher endabled more to buy their their own council homes from 1979-1997.

    When I met my wife, back in the 50's, her family. father a senior, albeit local, nationalised industry official, lived in a council house. Many of their neighbours were similar middle management types.
    When I bought our second family home, in the late 60's the bank manager remarked that 'a figure of £14k might, in today's inflationary times, be paid'. That house today is probably worth 3/4 million.

    My in-laws old house doesn't look anywhere near as smart and well-kept, nor does the rest of the row and 60 years ago.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,050
    29 minutes from posting to deletion! Not bad! https://twitter.com/jimwaterson/status/1471416897103093761/photo/1
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668
    Charles said:

    One of her top Severn mistakes?
    Jeez Charles not so early in the morning that hurt.
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    darkage said:

    I've taken out unsecured loans at this rate. Admittedly not recently though.

    Another option is mortgage equity withdrawal, that could bring the rate down to sub 2%, dependent on personal circumstances. Or just borrow the money off a wealthy relative and pay it back at 1-2%; win win as the savings rate is hopeless.
    We frequently disintermediate our bank by borrowing from the Bank of Mum and Dad
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,182
    darkage said:

    I live in the south east. The reality is that there just aren't that many jobs that pay above the mid 20k range. Even once you ascend past that point, the taxation plus student loan starts to hit badly.

    I started in the public sector in 2007 at 31k in an entry level role, and got to 49k in 2020, in a role touted as the pinnacle of my profession. It often involved working 6 days a week, for 12 hours a day, making extremely difficult decisions with little support, for which I will essentially be liable for the rest of my life, in organisations that are increasingly subject to political interference on staffing matters; and have a habit of hanging former staff out to dry.

    In the end, I came to conclude that I was being taken for a fool by the government, and that there are far easier ways to make £3000 per month after tax. That has turned out to be true.
    Wait until you come to the next realisation which is that the government would really rather you didn’t make your money via salary. You will be taxed heavily for doing so.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,879
    edited December 2021

    London the most religious, but least Christian region of E&W:

    London had the lowest percentage of people reporting No religion
    The percentage of the population who reported No religion ranged from an estimated 29.0% in London to 47.3% in Wales in 2019.

    People with a religious affiliation other than Christian accounted for over 25% of London’s population, compared with an estimated 10.6% of the overall population. Around one in seven people in London (14.3%) were Muslim. This percentage is higher than other regions, with the next most common regions being the West Midlands, Yorkshire and The Humber and North West (with 8.6%, 6.6% and 6.3% Muslim, respectively).

    The North East, South West, and Wales were the least religiously diverse regions, with over 95% of their populations Christian or with No religion.


    https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/populationandmigration/populationestimates/articles/populationestimatesbyethnicgroupandreligionenglandandwales/2019

    No surprise given London is almost 50% non white now and has big Asian populations who are Hindu or Sikh or Muslim and plenty of Muslims from Nigeria etc too. Though those who are Christian in London tend to be more active as London has bucked the trend of declining church attendance again helped by immigration of evangelicals from Africa and Roman Catholics from Eastern Europe and charismatic evangelical Christianity driven by the likes of HTB.

    https://www.ft.com/content/db8cade2-ffe0-11e8-ac00-57a2a826423e

    Immigration however is much slower in the North East, SW and Wales which have lower gdp and few really big cities than it is to London and the SE.
  • CharlesCharles Posts: 35,758
    moonshine said:

    What was the politicos rationale for the interest rate being so high? If you get a high flying job and reach six figures in your 20s, you pay it off early. The bigger chunk will presumably never pay it off. But there will be plenty in the middle who do pay it off but take most of their working life to do so.

    Was it purely so they could privatise the loan book with as small a discount as possible? Poor form if so.
    George Osborne… poor form… too clever by half… hmmh…
  • TimTTimT Posts: 6,468
    edited December 2021
    TOPPING said:

    They are owners of the LLC and hence shareholders is appropriate to use.
    No it is not. While they are owners, there are no shares to own, and hence no shareholder (which per business would be singular in any case). Why can't you simply admit you were wrong in your word choice.
  • Charles said:

    We frequently disintermediate our bank by borrowing from the Bank of Mum and Dad
    Lean times ahead for the bank of great great great great granpa?
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668
    edited December 2021
    HYUFD said:

    No surprise given London is almost 50% non white now and has big Asian populations who are Hindu or Sikh or Muslim and plenty of Muslims from Nigeria etc too. Though those who are Christian in London tend to be more active as London has bucked the trend of declining church attendance again helped by immigration of evangelicals from Africa and Roman Catholics from Eastern Europe and charismatic evangelical Christianity driven by the likes of HTB.

    https://www.ft.com/content/db8cade2-ffe0-11e8-ac00-57a2a826423e

    Immigration however is much slower in the North East, SW and Wales which have lower gdp and few really big cities than it is to London and the SE.
    Huh?

    "non-white" = non-Christian?
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,533
    TOPPING said:

    Huh?

    "non-white" = non-Christian?
    No; read the post. He says the opposite.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,050
    Every day this past two weeks or so has felt like a new door on an advent calendar, behind which there is a different MP absolutely showing their arse. Incredible.
    https://twitter.com/ben_machell/status/1471420393697206273
  • On repaying student loans early, here is detailed guidance:

    https://www.moneysavingexpert.com/students/repay-post-2012-student-loan/

    You need to be confident you will be in the "The top 20%-ish of graduate earners - Starting salary £40,000+ and above-inflation rises, or lower but with v big pay rises later" group to make it a sensible consideration.

  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,533
    Charles said:

    Just being there for her will be a lot. It may not satisfy you, as I suspect you are a problem solver by nature, but it will be hugely important for her
    Totally agree, Mr C; I gather young Ms Cyclefree hasn't got a partner to whom she can cry, and it's vital to have such at times likes these.
  • kjhkjh Posts: 12,487
    Scott_xP said:

    Every day this past two weeks or so has felt like a new door on an advent calendar, behind which there is a different MP absolutely showing their arse. Incredible.
    https://twitter.com/ben_machell/status/1471420393697206273

    Ewww
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668
    TimT said:

    No it is not. While they are owners, there are no shares to own, and hence no shareholder (which per business would be singular in any case). Why can't you simply admit you were wrong in your word choice.
    Owners = shareholders
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    Scott_xP said:

    Labour proper gunning for treasury this morning… turned up with their boots on finally.

    10:30am - UQ - Pat McFadden MP – To ask the Chancellor of the Exchequer if he will make a statement on government support for business given the advice to “de-prioritise social contacts”.
    https://twitter.com/mrharrycole/status/1471401729891905537

    Maybe Labour should have made that argument more clear, when there was a vote the other night?
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,182
    Scott_xP said:

    29 minutes from posting to deletion! Not bad! https://twitter.com/jimwaterson/status/1471416897103093761/photo/1

    Who was this? Dorries?
    Disgraceful.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,533
    Just switched over to the cricket and Warner's out. Nearly 200-2, where have I come across that before?
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668

    No; read the post. He says the opposite.
    Read the post??? Are you kidding me.

    I thought, on a skim read, that he was saying that because people are non-white they wouldn't be Christian.

    Entirely possible that that is not what he meant.
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    Farooq said:

    Ok, let me put it this way.

    A ladder is a tool that elevates you from one level to another. The way that PT described people buying a cheap house, then a more expensive one and so on etc doesn't strike me as a "ladder". That strikes me as the levels. The thing that allows you to access the different levels is having more money.

    The way in which housing can function as a "ladder" is when you derive wealth from it. I think a lot of people see housing as a way of becoming richer. You buy cheap and you sell dear. Of course, this doesn't necessarily help you buy a bigger house because that too will have increased in price.

    So housing being a "ladder" I think can work in general sense, but only if housing keeps increasing in value relative to income and a significant proportion of other investment or assets. That is obviously unsustainable in the long run.

    Perhaps some people have a different idea of a "ladder", that is, it is a yardstick by which you measure individual wealth as oppose to a means to an end. But I think a lot of people see things the way I described above: a ladder in the snakes-and-ladders sense. A shortcut that some will land on and others simply won't.
    Never occurred to me, but possibly the root of the metaphor is that a ladder is temporary? If you don't get on it today while you have the chance, it might have been pulled up tomorrow (tr: you might have missed out on your chance of ever owning property).
  • TimTTimT Posts: 6,468
    Farooq said:

    Ok, let me put it this way.

    A ladder is a tool that elevates you from one level to another. The way that PT described people buying a cheap house, then a more expensive one and so on etc doesn't strike me as a "ladder". That strikes me as the levels. The thing that allows you to access the different levels is having more money.

    The way in which housing can function as a "ladder" is when you derive wealth from it. I think a lot of people see housing as a way of becoming richer. You buy cheap and you sell dear. Of course, this doesn't necessarily help you buy a bigger house because that too will have increased in price.

    So housing being a "ladder" I think can work in general sense, but only if housing keeps increasing in value relative to income and a significant proportion of other investment or assets. That is obviously unsustainable in the long run.

    Perhaps some people have a different idea of a "ladder", that is, it is a yardstick by which you measure individual wealth as opposed to a means to an end. But I think a lot of people see things the way I described above: a ladder in the snakes-and-ladders sense. A shortcut that some will land on and others simply won't.
    You're forgetting that house buying also enables you to convert part of your expenses (rent) into investment and wealth creation. So it does not rely purely on asset value inflation. And if you buy bigger and rent out rooms, you are also creating an entirely new income stream.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,533
    edited December 2021
    TOPPING said:

    Read the post??? Are you kidding me.

    I thought, on a skim read, that he was saying that because people are non-white they wouldn't be Christian.

    Entirely possible that that is not what he meant.
    Understandable first line, but every so often there is a nugget among the dross.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,801
    edited December 2021

    Who was this? Dorries?
    Disgraceful.
    It's true though, Whitty and the other scientists are there to advise, not make decisions. For the first time in what feels like forever the 100 Tories have wrestled control of the state back from the unelected tyranny of experts.

    The Times write up on the rebellion did make me laugh though, apparently Boris thought getting Whitty to give the rebel leaders the same presentation they got would change their minds, instead it emboldened them because one of them asked point blank - would vaccine passports make any difference to transmission of the virus - and Whitty said no, they wouldn't. Another one asked what would make a difference and he apparently said they don't know if anything would work because big Omi is so transmissive.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,082
    MattW said:

    To answer that you need to know what restrictions have been imposed elsewhere, and when, by France.

    The Daily Wail is not going to report comparative restrictions on travelling from Ch to Fr.

    Though there's a clear Muppetry of the Macron element here.

    Why not email the French Embassy, and report back?
    The restrictions come in midnight Friday/Saturday and essentially ban tourism; travel is allowed to visit family, to accompany a spouse/parent/child who is a French citizen or as transit to a main residence elsewhere in the EU. But for all arrivals there is to be a quarantine and test requirement, as well as the PCR test required to be taken within 24 hours of arrival - which will be tough since most PCR test results take longer than that to receive.
This discussion has been closed.