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Could Truss be tempted by an early election? – politicalbetting.com

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  • The Green Party's transport policy doesn't seem to be very coherent. They're opposed to HS2, complain that trains to Birmingham are too full but also that tickets are too expensive, and think the solution is public ownership:

    @GreenPartyMolly
    Train to Birmingham is absolutely rammed

    I'm lucky to have a small space to sit on the floor

    I really don't feel my £90 ticket to Aberystwyth was good value

    #PublicOwnershipNow


    https://twitter.com/GreenPartyMolly/status/1563138231629418496

    Oh dear:
    1. The shitshow that is Britain's railways this summer is entirely the doing of the DfT
    2. The emergency timetable on Avanti is the result of the DfT "break apart everything Virgin did" franchise agreement
    3. The £90 fare is set by the DfT
    4. Her onward connection to Aber is run by the Welsh government.
    5. No passenger rail franchise has ever been privatised. A fixed term exclusive contract to operate services awarded to a private operator does not mean they own it. When the contract ends operating rights revert back to the owner - the DfT

    There is no "nationalise it" magic wand to wave when the damage has been done by the wazzocks in government meddling in everything.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,817
    Kwasi wants to sack Bailey. That's risky but if the replacement is credible, say Raghuram Rajan, we could actually get inflation under control. Bailey is useless.
  • RattersRatters Posts: 1,295
    Alistair said:

    Handy ONS actuarial stats.

    https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/birthsdeathsandmarriages/lifeexpectancies/articles/howhaslifeexpectancychangedovertime/2015-09-09

    In 1947 the average 65 year old male would have lived for another 11ish years

    By the 1980s it was only up to 13 years.

    Now it is more than 18 years.

    Yes people's expectations of the length of retirement are unrealistic.

    Better if we could encourage more part time working for older people to phase them out of the workforce.

    Personally I'd much rather work 1-2 days a week and have more money to spend on the remaining days, than have all in the time in the world and be so limited in what I can afford to do.
  • IshmaelZ said:

    'Lives at risk' without more help on energy bills

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-62674301

    We Are All Snowflakes Now. This is how it will pan out: Truss will hold out for a week offering tax cuts and austerity and then cave and say all Must Have Heating, after its too late to salvage much political capital by doing so. and unless she emulates the underrated Lord North and takes the CotE job in-house everyone will say what a lovely man Kwasi is, and she'll be looking at the Next Leader betting and glancing over her shoulder at him.

    As the general public are feckless and too addicted to handouts and need to be kept warm, there is a simple solution.

    Allow Tory donors to create a new company and then days later be awarded a £117m contract without tender to construct a big wooden wheel in every village hall across the country. Simply make the working class walk on the wheel all day to generate power for their homes and keep them warm into the bargain.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,505
    MrEd said:

    Betting wise, might be worthwhile - if there is a market - having a bet on another Conservative leadership election in 2023.

    My feeling increasingly is that Truss is going to fuck this up massively, primarily over the issue of energy bills (which would please Putin, Lavrov et al no end). The idea of JRM coming on the airwaves to explain why the Government won't help out is guaranteed to cause apoplexy.

    I also think anger over energy issues will feed into other areas which is why we are starting to get tirades about the ambulance service.

    2023 could get very ugly in the U.K. politically.

    Can't see a market on BF for this. But you make good points.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,505

    C4News. No-one representing Truss prepared to come on. Instead a statement about how tax cuts will put more money in people’s pockets. Fuc*ing ridiculous!

    Only if you pay tax etc etc.

    The Truss campaign are surely just holding out so that she can make a big whizzy statement involving billions of £ on day one of her premiership. Surely they don't actually believe this tax cut solves everything bollx?
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,933
    edited August 2022
    Ratters said:

    Yes people's expectations of the length of retirement are unrealistic.

    Better if we could encourage more part time working for older people to phase them out of the workforce.

    Personally I'd much rather work 1-2 days a week and have more money to spend on the remaining days, than have all in the time in the world and be so limited in what I can afford to do.
    And yet those who can afford to are increasingly retiring earlier.
    How about making a working life a little more attractive to employees? The market says they can't wait to bugger off right now.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,807
    MaxPB said:

    Kwasi wants to sack Bailey. That's risky but if the replacement is credible, say Raghuram Rajan, we could actually get inflation under control. Bailey is useless.

    How about Jens Weidmann? :)
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    Sean_F said:

    The triple lock has to go. All it does is redistribute income from those who need it to those who don't.
    Anyone who needs the state pension, for any reasonable meanig of "need," needs the triple lock. 10k a year is not a yuge amount.

    There's a lot to be said for stiffing the richbois for whom it covers their drinks bill by means testing it. Despite cries of I paid in all my life, I'm entitled...
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,817

    How about Jens Weidmann? :)
    Lol, imagine handing the keys to the Bank to a hostile German.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,787

    Entirely possible she is holding out at the moment from any kind of serious announcement so that on Day One of Truss Administration she can go for a Big Bang and make a sweeping statement involving tens of billions and get her premiership off to a + start in the media.

    This is what I think. Expectations management. Don't see any point in doing it now, so Sunak can take potshots at it.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,251
    Ratters said:

    I see four obvious options:

    1) Increase retirement age much quicker. A bit unfair on those under 67, but makes things more sustainable.

    2) Increase the charges for health and social care, even if cashflow is deferred and paid from assets when they pass away. Thereby stopping the increasing tax burden from falling on the economically productive part of the population.

    3) Wealth taxes to achieve a similar goal to point 2 but shared across more people (but still biased to older generations). Abolishing NI and making part of income tax has a similar effect.

    4) Continue to put all the tax burden on an ever shrinking working population as the economy gradually gets less productive and slowly decline into a shadow of our former self.

    I predict that number 4 will be chosen.
    And then we will eventually elect a Corbynite revolutionary with all the mess that will bring. So probably 2045 before the grown ups are back in charge.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,505
    MaxPB said:

    Kwasi wants to sack Bailey. That's risky but if the replacement is credible, say Raghuram Rajan, we could actually get inflation under control. Bailey is useless.

    He can't. The governor has an eight year term.

    I suppose they could "persuade" him to take early retirement.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,817

    He can't. The governor has an eight year term.

    I suppose they could "persuade" him to take early retirement.
    If the Chancellor doesn't have confidence in the governor then the governor has to resign. No way he could stay under those circumstances. They could also reopen all of the investigations surrounding his time in charge of the FCA if he doesn't go quietly. One of the reasons sterling is weaker than it should be is because markets don't believe the bank has credibility, specifically Bailey. Solve that and we take 5-6% off imported inflation within a few months.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,251
    IshmaelZ said:

    Anyone who needs the state pension, for any reasonable meanig of "need," needs the triple lock. 10k a year is not a yuge amount.

    There's a lot to be said for stiffing the richbois for whom it covers their drinks bill by means testing it. Despite cries of I paid in all my life, I'm entitled...
    They do not need the triple lock. They need a decent level of state support, which can be provided by infinite alternative systems that do not involve a triple lock.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,353
    Pulpstar said:

    We seem to have almost uniquely gone all in on gas
    It was not going all in on gas that was the problem, but an unwillingness of British generators to get into fixed long-term supply contracts.

    The Japanese and South Koreans entered into twenty year contracts with LNG exporters. We did not, relying almost entirely on spot cargoes.

    Which was great... until it wasn't.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,807
    @staylorish
    Noam Chomsky tells an Edinburgh Book Festival audience that Vladimir Putin should be given the benefit of the doubt on his motives for invading Ukraine, and that he (Chomsky) supports Scottish independence. The audience, which must be overwhelmingly idiots, whoops and cheers.


    https://twitter.com/staylorish/status/1563219243025326080
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,491
    IshmaelZ said:

    Anyone who needs the state pension, for any reasonable meanig of "need," needs the triple lock. 10k a year is not a yuge amount.

    There's a lot to be said for stiffing the richbois for whom it covers their drinks bill by means testing it. Despite cries of I paid in all my life, I'm entitled...
    Alternatively, keep pushing up the retirement age.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,817

    @staylorish
    Noam Chomsky tells an Edinburgh Book Festival audience that Vladimir Putin should be given the benefit of the doubt on his motives for invading Ukraine, and that he (Chomsky) supports Scottish independence. The audience, which must be overwhelmingly idiots, whoops and cheers.


    https://twitter.com/staylorish/status/1563219243025326080

    English urban middle classes lefties, mostly Corbyites.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,491

    @staylorish
    Noam Chomsky tells an Edinburgh Book Festival audience that Vladimir Putin should be given the benefit of the doubt on his motives for invading Ukraine, and that he (Chomsky) supports Scottish independence. The audience, which must be overwhelmingly idiots, whoops and cheers.


    https://twitter.com/staylorish/status/1563219243025326080

    Chomsky is a POS.
  • RazedabodeRazedabode Posts: 3,104
    Truss won’t call an early election. She’ll be under pressure after the first week when the bounce doesn’t appear, or when she fails to realise she has to govern for the country rather than the Tory membership.

    She has an odd sense of overconfidence.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,787
    edited August 2022
    dixiedean said:

    According to this article a later study vastly downgraded that estimate.

    https://www.lse.ac.uk/granthaminstitute/explainers/what-potential-reserves-of-shale-gas-are-there-in-the-uk/#:~:text=Four areas in the UK,Wessex area in Southern England.

    The idea that we could become an instant net exporter of energy if only we fracked is not supported by much evidence unfortunately.
    Is that not a bit iffy? The British Geological Survey study (of 55 pages) says between 23.3 and 64.6 trillion cubic metres, and I don't see why they would be prone to sensationalism.

    There follows a 10 page journal article in Nature, which is sniffy about this figure (standard practise in academia), but their downgraded figure is 4 trillion cubic metres. Not even a fifth of the BGS's lowest estimate? Why the vast chasm between the two figures? And why is it accepted universally that the more detailed piece of initial research is wrong, and the journal article is right?
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,353
    theProle said:

    In the current economic climate, why aren't they running their lignite flat out 24/7 and exporting the surplus - ultimately it would mean someone isn't burning scarce and expensive gas?
    That's a great question: and the answer is that in Germany, lignite mines and power stations are at the same locations, and the German government has told the mines to go at full extraction capacity, but to store as much as possible.

    (Basically: they want to make sure they don't run out of lignite to burn in the depths of winter.)
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    Sean_F said:

    Alternatively, keep pushing up the retirement age.
    For the 1962 and younger cohorts.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,817
    Sean_F said:

    Alternatively, keep pushing up the retirement age.
    That, and tapering from £40k to £60k so no one who has private income of £60k+ gets it. If we can implement tapering for child benefit then we can do it for the state pension.
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 12,746

    Truss won’t call an early election. She’ll be under pressure after the first week when the bounce doesn’t appear, or when she fails to realise she has to govern for the country rather than the Tory membership.

    She has an odd sense of overconfidence.

    I suppose that very sense of overconfidence could lead to her calling one but I don’t think she’s that deluded.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,505
    "“Affidavit heavily redacted!!! Nothing mentioned on ‘Nuclear,’ a total public relations subterfuge by the FBI & DOJ, or our close working relationship regarding document turnover – WE GAVE THEM MUCH,”

    Trump
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,491
    MaxPB said:

    That, and tapering from £40k to £60k so no one who has private income of £60k+ gets it. If we can implement tapering for child benefit then we can do it for the state pension.
    And, euthanasia for the "useless eaters, " naturally.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,933

    Is that not a bit iffy? The British Geological Survey study (of 55 pages) says between 23.3 and 64.6 trillion cubic metres, and I don't see why they would be prone to sensationalism.

    There follows a 10 page journal article in Nature, which is sniffy about this figure (standard practise in academia), but their downgraded figure is 4 trillion cubic metres. Not even a fifth of the BGS's lowest estimate? Why the vast chasm between the two figures? And why is it accepted universally that the more detailed piece of initial research is wrong, and the journal article is right?
    Dunno sorry.
    Not really.my field of expertise.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,505
    DougSeal said:

    I suppose that very sense of overconfidence could lead to her calling one but I don’t think she’s that deluded.
    As I have posted before, to me, she has the air of someone who the job will send bonkers quite quickly. All go to her head etc etc.

    Being premier is like an x-ray of your soul said one of the pol commentators once ( i think Steve Richards?)

    Although i have to say i liked her comments about diverting £ into social care - which, believe me, is a total clusterf*ck at the moment.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,933
    edited August 2022
    IshmaelZ said:

    For the 1962 and younger cohorts.
    I would push that later by ooh...around five years sounds suitable.
  • carnforthcarnforth Posts: 5,685
    Rolls Royce may have its first very tentative export opportunity for its small modular reactor:

    https://www.insidermedia.com/news/midlands/rolls-royce-smr-partners-with-dutch-development-company

    Making money building nuclear plants is really hard, but could Rolls Royce pull it off?
  • pigeonpigeon Posts: 5,173
    dixiedean said:

    And yet those who can afford to are increasingly retiring earlier.
    How about making a working life a little more attractive to employees? The market says they can't wait to bugger off right now.
    You do this... how, exactly?

    Most jobs are not beloved vocations, and most workers would happily quit in a nanosecond if they won a socking great lottery prize.

    Very few people want to work any longer than they have to. I suppose the most obvious way in which one could make work 'more attractive to employees' is by paying them more, but given that 'those who can afford to are increasingly retiring earlier,' this is unlikely to have the desired effect.

    The only way you might be able to compel a large fraction of ageing workers to keep slogging away, when they would rather have playtime for a bit before they go gaga and then perish, is by dramatically increasing the state pension age, so that only people with very fat private pensions or other investments can bridge the gap to the point at which they become eligible for sundry pensioner benefits and tax exemptions.

    Most people don't want to go to work. They're not going to be made to love it with cheap bribes. They have to be forced into it by circumstances.
  • RandallFlaggRandallFlagg Posts: 1,381
    MaxPB said:

    English urban middle classes lefties, mostly Corbyites.
    If polling is to be believed, urban, middle class lefty English people are actually more unionist than right-leaning working class, leavers.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,505
    Sean_F said:

    Chomsky is a POS.
    Useful idiot.
  • RandallFlaggRandallFlagg Posts: 1,381

    Useful idiot.
    God knows where we'd be right now if Jezza had become PM. Or Ukraine for that matter.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,933
    pigeon said:

    You do this... how, exactly?

    Most jobs are not beloved vocations, and most workers would happily quit in a nanosecond if they won a socking great lottery prize.

    Very few people want to work any longer than they have to. I suppose the most obvious way in which one could make work 'more attractive to employees' is by paying them more, but given that 'those who can afford to are increasingly retiring earlier,' this is unlikely to have the desired effect.

    The only way you might be able to compel a large fraction of ageing workers to keep slogging away, when they would rather have playtime for a bit before they go gaga and then perish, is by dramatically increasing the state pension age, so that only people with very fat private pensions or other investments can bridge the gap to the point at which they become eligible for sundry pensioner benefits and tax exemptions.

    Most people don't want to go to work. They're not going to be made to love it with cheap bribes. They have to be forced into it by circumstances.
    Well precisely.
    I was being a little facetious about making work more attractive. People want to retire. My cohort in their mid 50's are counting the days.
    People hate working as a general rule.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,787

    God knows where we'd be right now if Jezza had become PM. Or Ukraine for that matter.
    Under severe threat of ordinary sized gas bills?
  • pigeon said:

    You do this... how, exactly?

    Most jobs are not beloved vocations, and most workers would happily quit in a nanosecond if they won a socking great lottery prize.

    Very few people want to work any longer than they have to. I suppose the most obvious way in which one could make work 'more attractive to employees' is by paying them more, but given that 'those who can afford to are increasingly retiring earlier,' this is unlikely to have the desired effect.

    The only way you might be able to compel a large fraction of ageing workers to keep slogging away, when they would rather have playtime for a bit before they go gaga and then perish, is by dramatically increasing the state pension age, so that only people with very fat private pensions or other investments can bridge the gap to the point at which they become eligible for sundry pensioner benefits and tax exemptions.

    Most people don't want to go to work. They're not going to be made to love it with cheap bribes. They have to be forced into it by circumstances.
    Making part-time work available might do the trick; we can see from the medical profession it is a popular option.

    Now, whether encouraging the elderly to stay on and block jobs for younger people is sensible is an awkward question because employers might not want it. We can see laws in place around the world to stop, or at least slow down, companies getting rid of older workers in favour of younger ones.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,507

    I am so old I remember when the Green Party were totally for high speed trains and no other party was interested.

    Disappointing to see what their position is now.

    Although to be fair, no way any high speed service is getting to Aberystwyth in our lifetimes.

    So it's actually a very slow speed service? :smile:

    The point being that when HS2 is built it will be far easier to run more trains on the WCML to New Street, and there will be more platform capacity for trains from inter alia the Cambrian system to park up there.
  • stodgestodge Posts: 14,469
    Early evening all :)

    I won't re-quote the earlier comments about how rising fuel prices are going to impact chip shops - they won't be the only ones. Presumably, most eateries are going to suffer including my local cafe.

    I was also thinking of that other haven of the lost, lonely, sad and desperate, no, not PB but the betting shop. They are big users of electricity - think of all those screens and FOBTs. Moving on from that you have the racecourses who race using floodlights in the winter which is now all the artificial surface venues except Lingfield.

    It's not just the cost of staging the meetings - it's the fuel costs of getting the horses, jockeys, trainers etc to the courses. I've proposed canning the floodlit season from November 1st to the end of February - yes, it would reduce opportunities within the racing industry but we are already hearing lamentations from trainers complaining at transport costs.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,295
    edited August 2022
    Ratters said:

    I see four obvious options:

    1) Increase retirement age much quicker. A bit unfair on those under 67, but makes things more sustainable.

    2) Increase the charges for health and social care, even if cashflow is deferred and paid from assets when they pass away. Thereby stopping the increasing tax burden from falling on the economically productive part of the population.

    3) Wealth taxes to achieve a similar goal to point 2 but shared across more people (but still biased to older generations). Abolishing NI and making part of income tax has a similar effect.

    4) Continue to put all the tax burden on an ever shrinking working population as the economy gradually gets less productive and slowly decline into a shadow of our former self.

    I predict that number 4 will be chosen.
    I love this little conversation.

    @MrEd nails it with the first post - the pendulum has swung away from Reaganomics/Thatcherism.

    @BartholomewRoberts makes a plea for more neoliberalism but it's almost as if he knows he's fighting a lost cause.

    @rcs1000 highlights the structural issues we're facing - we are the victims of our own success in helping people live longer.

    And finally, @Ratters provides three options for the the solution (his feared choice, 4., is no solution and cannot be the long-term choice).

    I would just add that we should celebrate our success in living longer healthier lives - that is a massive prize, for which it is well worth forgoing perpetual 'standard of living' increases (which nowadays just means acquiring more 'stuff' we probably don't need).
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,933
    This really is the period of maximum danger for the Tories.
    It could all fall apart very quickly.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,295
    dixiedean said:

    This really is the period of maximum danger for the Tories.
    It could all fall apart very quickly.

    How would we know, if it did?
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,507
    dixiedean said:

    This really is the period of maximum danger for the Tories.
    It could has all fall fallen apart very quickly.

    FTFY.

    No smiley face because although I'm not sorry to see the Tories IDS*, it's horrible for the rest of us.

    *in deep shit. Who, er, What did you think I meant?
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,295
    stodge said:

    Early evening all :)

    I won't re-quote the earlier comments about how rising fuel prices are going to impact chip shops - they won't be the only ones. Presumably, most eateries are going to suffer including my local cafe.

    I was also thinking of that other haven of the lost, lonely, sad and desperate, no, not PB but the betting shop. They are big users of electricity - think of all those screens and FOBTs. Moving on from that you have the racecourses who race using floodlights in the winter which is now all the artificial surface venues except Lingfield.

    It's not just the cost of staging the meetings - it's the fuel costs of getting the horses, jockeys, trainers etc to the courses. I've proposed canning the floodlit season from November 1st to the end of February - yes, it would reduce opportunities within the racing industry but we are already hearing lamentations from trainers complaining at transport costs.

    All further examples of why energy prices should have been frozen. Whatever the cost, a way should have been found.
  • pigeonpigeon Posts: 5,173

    Making part-time work available might do the trick; we can see from the medical profession it is a popular option.

    Now, whether encouraging the elderly to stay on and block jobs for younger people is sensible is an awkward question because employers might not want it. We can see laws in place around the world to stop, or at least slow down, companies getting rid of older workers in favour of younger ones.
    Part-time working of this kind is, of course, very popular because it is a means for people who can't quite afford to retire to work less. Until the moment they can afford to retire properly, when they immediately bugger off. Should Plan A (massive lottery prize; immediately bugger off) fail to bear fruit, then my own personal Plan B consists of going part-time just as soon as possible - so at least I'm only dragging myself out of bed at half-past agony three days a week, rather than five.
  • stodgestodge Posts: 14,469
    dixiedean said:

    Well precisely.
    I was being a little facetious about making work more attractive. People want to retire. My cohort in their mid 50's are counting the days.
    People hate working as a general rule.
    You'd better believe those of us in our early 60s already have an "exit plan" worked out. Of those with whom I work it's often those who have children very late (and are still putting them through University) or those whose finances have been ravaged by divorce or poor investment decisions who still seem to want to work.

    I think we need a fundamental re-evaluation of the nature of work - the idea of 9 to 5, five days a week, just sounds absurd in the modern era. We remain wedded to the work culture of the factory and the compartmentalisation of our work and home lives. I've seen the expression "post-work world" banded around for those societies with an increasing percentage of economically active individuals.

    That seems to be formulated and developed into a new economic and cultural model for the mid-21st century and beyond.
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,339
    edited August 2022
    MaxPB said:

    If the Chancellor doesn't have confidence in the governor then the governor has to resign. No way he could stay under those circumstances. They could also reopen all of the investigations surrounding his time in charge of the FCA if he doesn't go quietly. One of the reasons sterling is weaker than it should be is because markets don't believe the bank has credibility, specifically Bailey. Solve that and we take 5-6% off imported inflation within a few months.
    Careful what you wish for, Max.

    Sacking a Bank governor (even if he is a duffer) costs a bit in credibility anyway.

    And given that the Truss solution to everything is Grow Baby, Grow, I can see her (via KK) finding and appointing someone even softer on inflation.

    An unsustainable boom in 2023 is their only hope of winning in 2024.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,933
    dixiedean said:

    This really is the period of maximum danger for the Tories.
    It could all fall apart very quickly.

    I meant internally.
    The problem with a double secret probation plan is that when the great reveal happens, some Tories say no. You never campaigned on that.
    Rumours that the Emergency Budget will just be the tax cuts and a statement of intentions.
    Thus avoiding scrutiny from the OBR. Who are saying they are perfectly able to produce an opinion.
    If that's the plan then God help us all.
  • Making part-time work available might do the trick; we can see from the medical profession it is a popular option.

    Now, whether encouraging the elderly to stay on and block jobs for younger people is sensible is an awkward question because employers might not want it. We can see laws in place around the world to stop, or at least slow down, companies getting rid of older workers in favour of younger ones.
    The trick is going to be to create a lot of "wise old owl" roles in the economy. Think Ken Clarke in Cameron's cabinets.


    Not in charge, or the generation below will go mad waiting for their turn. Not doing madly physical stuff. But available, in tap, to dispense experience and wisdom.

    Tricky.
  • stodgestodge Posts: 14,469
    dixiedean said:

    This really is the period of maximum danger for the Tories.
    It could all fall apart very quickly.

    The new Prime Minister has a formidable challenge - far greater than the ones facing Johnson and May.

    Her (presumably) authority over the Party will seem complete initially but clearly there are plenty beyond the membership who have "doubts" and won't give her a lot of space or time.

    We've also got the expectations management thing - something "big and bold" would seem the most attractive option but it must grate with traditionally small-state Conservatives to hear some of the more interventionist lines being put about.

    We also know it's not just a winter of rising fuel poverty ahead - it seems possible higher energy costs will be with us for at least as long as there is continuing conflict in the Ukraine.

    I'm cautiously optimistic.

    One of the reasons I support the capitalist system is flexibility - adversity creates opportunity just as it did at the start of the pandemic. Those who moved quickly into home delivery for example did very well. Those who can champion energy efficiency will do well just as thermal insulation flourished in the 1970s after the 73-74 oil price shock.

    Higher energy prices will in time generate energy efficiency throughout the economy either via alternative sources or by technology making better use of what we use.
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 14,005

    "gap year, first degree, masters, other professional training, doing down cul-de-sacs, meeting the wrong partner"

    Just to pick up a few of those, I am not sure we should be deciding long term demographic policy on the basis of whether someone has a gap year or does a masters. Most don't.

    As it currently stands we ask our children to do some of their most important learning at exactly the wrong time - when they are going through emotional and physical turmoil of their teens. It seems to me that shifting this to when they are slightly older is no bad thing. Moreover, if you are going to ask older people to work longer then you either need to create more jobs or have the younger generation start later.
    Fair points; it's not an easy one. Some of my problems remain however.

  • darkagedarkage Posts: 5,398
    dixiedean said:

    Well precisely.
    I was being a little facetious about making work more attractive. People want to retire. My cohort in their mid 50's are counting the days.
    People hate working as a general rule.
    You need to try and find work that you like doing. So many people get stuck in jobs that they don't like. I've always viewed my career as an odyssey just trying out new things and experiences and find that, generally, after 4 years doing whatever I am doing it is time to move on.


  • TomsToms Posts: 2,478

    I’ve just come over to my mate’s where I planted all his vegetables. He’s not picked anything in the last two weeks so I had to do a little harvest. He has several marrows of various shape and colour, a few overgrown mini cucumbers and a big bowl of tomatoes.

    My tomatoes are still going great. I passed twenty pounds total on my harvest this morning and should reach ten kilos tomorrow. I love having two unit scales and extra milestones.


    Gorgeous! I'm not (quite) a vegetarian, but I am a vegetable-arian big time. Lucky mate.
  • Jim_MillerJim_Miller Posts: 3,262
    Here are the "tapering" rules for social security in the US: "If a worker delays receiving Social Security retirement benefits until after they reach full retirement age,[48] the benefit will increase by two-thirds of one percent of the PIA per month.[49] After age 70 there are no more increases as a result of delaying benefits. Social Security uses an "average" survival rate at your full retirement age to prorate the increase in the amount of benefit increase so that the total benefits are roughly the same whenever you retire. Women may benefit more than men from this delayed benefit increase since the "average" survival rates are based on both men and women and women live approximately three years longer than men. The other consideration is that workers have only a limited number of years of "good" health left after they reach full retirement age and unless they enjoy their job they may be passing up an opportunity to do something else they may enjoy doing while they are still relatively healthy."
    source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_Security_(United_States)#Delayed_benefits

    As far as I know, they are uncontroversial, now.

    (George W. Bush proposed a reform which would have invested part of social security taxes in securities, with subisidies for low-income workers. It didn't get majority support, in spite of that redistributive sweetner.)
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 14,005
    edited August 2022
    The problem insufficiently addressed so far is that with the gigantic numbers of people affected by the energy hike - SFAICS the entire working and just managing class + of course loads of OAPs etc, the people in need of a further handout and the class of taxpayers who are the only group large enough to pay for the handouts are largely the same people.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,251

    The trick is going to be to create a lot of "wise old owl" roles in the economy. Think Ken Clarke in Cameron's cabinets.


    Not in charge, or the generation below will go mad waiting for their turn. Not doing madly physical stuff. But available, in tap, to dispense experience and wisdom.

    Tricky.
    The key is to get the oldies occupied for most of the day on other stuff. Perhaps get them addicted to posting their random thoughts on an internet blog for example.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,251
    algarkirk said:

    The problem insufficiently addressed so far is that with the gigantic numbers of people affected by the energy hike - SFAICS the entire working and just managing class + of course loads of OAPs etc, the people in need of a further handout and the class of taxpayers who are the only group large enough to pay for the handouts are largely the same people.

    Not in proportion to costs and certainly not in proportion to year 1 cash flow required.
  • Jim_MillerJim_Miller Posts: 3,262
    Osama bin Laden (or some one working for him) wrote an op-ed which was published in the Guardian.

    What struck me about it at the time was that . . . it read as if it was written by Noam Chomsky. So much so that I considered sending him a note, asking whether he would confess to being the ghost writer.
  • I fear I am doxxing Leon here by mentioning Karl Andersson.

    Masturbation journal paper exposes deeper problems in research

    Karl Andersson’s ‘appallingly bad’ paper has exposed the insanity of ethnography’s turn towards introspection and other postmodern research methods that place little value on objectivity, says William Matthews


    A peer-reviewed article based on masturbation to paedophilic comics as an autoethnographic method has rightly sparked condemnation within and beyond academia.

    The article by Karl Andersson, a University of Manchester PhD student, has now been removed from Qualitative Research’s website. Its ethical failings have already been scrutinised by journalists and academics. But a key question remains outstanding: how has qualitative research, ostensibly under the banner of anthropology, got to the point where something like this could even be considered scholarship in the first place?


    https://www.timeshighereducation.com/news/masturbation-journal-paper-exposes-deeper-problems-research
  • Jim_MillerJim_Miller Posts: 3,262
    BlancheLivermore - Your "victory garden" reminds me of the time, years ago, when I had a full-scale garden. One of the biggest surprises were the cantaloupes. The small ones I raised had a better taste than the commercial ones, but the taste varied widely, even on melons picked on successive days from the same vine.

    (Don't know if they can be raised in your part of Britain, but they are, in my experience, worth the trouble, if that is possible.)
  • pigeonpigeon Posts: 5,173

    O/T We have had a hummingbird hawk-moth visiting our geraniums this evening - first time we have ever seen one in this country, though it's not that uncommon apparently. Beautiful though.

    image

    (Not a photo of the one we saw, obvs)

    I also saw one enjoying a drink from some lavender flowers on the way home the other evening. I assume that they're colonising the country from further South due to climate change.
  • stodgestodge Posts: 14,469
    algarkirk said:

    The problem insufficiently addressed so far is that with the gigantic numbers of people affected by the energy hike - SFAICS the entire working and just managing class + of course loads of OAPs etc, the people in need of a further handout and the class of taxpayers who are the only group large enough to pay for the handouts are largely the same people.

    I've spoken to a few friends and colleagues and a view I've heard goes something like this:

    "Someone somewhere is profiting from all this. They don't deserve to and the Government should be going after these undeserved profits and taxing them and giving the proceeds to the public to help us pay our bills"

    Executive pay is also getting noticed an becoming an issue and particularly the remuneration packages handed out to the senior managers of water companies for example. There's also the issue of foreign ownership - this is why nationalisation is popular. It's back to those notions of accountability and control that resonated so much in the EU debate.

    I do point out one of the organisations doing well is the Government via VAT - that elicits a fairly predictable response in terms of cutting VAT. I then point out the amount we are now paying in debt interest and servicing future debt and if you want to cut health, defence or education, be my guest but don't expect it to be popular.
  • FairlieredFairliered Posts: 5,588
    MaxPB said:

    If the Chancellor doesn't have confidence in the governor then the governor has to resign. No way he could stay under those circumstances. They could also reopen all of the investigations surrounding his time in charge of the FCA if he doesn't go quietly. One of the reasons sterling is weaker than it should be is because markets don't believe the bank has credibility, specifically Bailey. Solve that and we take 5-6% off imported inflation within a few months.
    He should be forced to invest his compensation with St. James’s Place.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,353

    Read an interesting comment from a rather annoyed man on Conhome:

    'Astonishing; that you have the brass neck to accuse other people of "not cottoning onto reality" - yet you don't mention the 500 ton elephant in the room. The vast quantities of gas, right under our feet in the Bowland Basin!
    A survey was done in 2013 by the British Geological Survey. If their most conservative estimate of the gas reserves is correct, there's enough gas to supply the whole of the UK at 2018 rates of consumption, for 275 years!'

    @Richard_Tyndall ; @rcs1000 - this is very much at odds with prevailing opinion. Has the commentor got this totally wrong, and if so, how has he got it so wrong? Or is the gas he is referring to just really hard to winkle out?

    Edit: of course anybody else with relevant info or thoughts is welcome to offer an opinion.

    There have been plenty of well drilled prior to the 2019 ban on fracking in the UK, by both Cuadrilla and by iGas. Neither of them were able to find commercially viable deposits. iGas shares had lost more than 99% of their value by the end of 2018.

    It is worth remembering that the US has twenty or so shale basins. Of these, only two or three are commercially viable. The rest, yes, there's gas there, but it's either too deep, or the rock above it is two expensive to drill through, or the flow rates you get after fracturing the rock just aren't good enough.

    There's a lazy assumption that "shale gas deposits" mean it must be like the Marcellus, and not like the Floyd or the Antrim shales.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,350
    pigeon said:

    I also saw one enjoying a drink from some lavender flowers on the way home the other evening. I assume that they're colonising the country from further South due to climate change.
    Seems to have quite a northerly extent, going up to northern Norway and Iceland.

    https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Distribution_map_Macroglossum_stellatarum.svg
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,507

    I fear I am doxxing Leon here by mentioning Karl Andersson.

    Masturbation journal paper exposes deeper problems in research

    Karl Andersson’s ‘appallingly bad’ paper has exposed the insanity of ethnography’s turn towards introspection and other postmodern research methods that place little value on objectivity, says William Matthews


    A peer-reviewed article based on masturbation to paedophilic comics as an autoethnographic method has rightly sparked condemnation within and beyond academia.

    The article by Karl Andersson, a University of Manchester PhD student, has now been removed from Qualitative Research’s website. Its ethical failings have already been scrutinised by journalists and academics. But a key question remains outstanding: how has qualitative research, ostensibly under the banner of anthropology, got to the point where something like this could even be considered scholarship in the first place?


    https://www.timeshighereducation.com/news/masturbation-journal-paper-exposes-deeper-problems-research

    He'll never be forgiven for exposing the fact that ethnographers are all creepy wankers.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,353

    @staylorish
    Noam Chomsky tells an Edinburgh Book Festival audience that Vladimir Putin should be given the benefit of the doubt on his motives for invading Ukraine, and that he (Chomsky) supports Scottish independence. The audience, which must be overwhelmingly idiots, whoops and cheers.


    https://twitter.com/staylorish/status/1563219243025326080

    Chomsky has always been a cunt.
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 14,005
    stodge said:

    I've spoken to a few friends and colleagues and a view I've heard goes something like this:

    "Someone somewhere is profiting from all this. They don't deserve to and the Government should be going after these undeserved profits and taxing them and giving the proceeds to the public to help us pay our bills"

    Executive pay is also getting noticed an becoming an issue and particularly the remuneration packages handed out to the senior managers of water companies for example. There's also the issue of foreign ownership - this is why nationalisation is popular. It's back to those notions of accountability and control that resonated so much in the EU debate.

    I do point out one of the organisations doing well is the Government via VAT - that elicits a fairly predictable response in terms of cutting VAT. I then point out the amount we are now paying in debt interest and servicing future debt and if you want to cut health, defence or education, be my guest but don't expect it to be popular.
    Figures mentioned have been up to £100bn. To get it in perspective, if it were per annum that's about 18-20p on the basic rate of income tax.

  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,353

    Is that not a bit iffy? The British Geological Survey study (of 55 pages) says between 23.3 and 64.6 trillion cubic metres, and I don't see why they would be prone to sensationalism.

    There follows a 10 page journal article in Nature, which is sniffy about this figure (standard practise in academia), but their downgraded figure is 4 trillion cubic metres. Not even a fifth of the BGS's lowest estimate? Why the vast chasm between the two figures? And why is it accepted universally that the more detailed piece of initial research is wrong, and the journal article is right?
    There are also two entirely different numbers that one can be talking about (actually, there's more than two, but I'm just going for two...):

    (1) There is the amount of oil and gas in place
    (2) There is the amount of commercially extractable oil and gas

    You might very well have an absolutely enormous (1), but a tiny (2).
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,295
    edited August 2022
    rcs1000 said:

    Chomsky has always been a cunt.
    You be careful you don't end up having to ban yourself for using the c-word!
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,129
    rcs1000 said:

    Chomsky has always been a cunt.
    ONE RULE FOR US ;)
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    edited August 2022

    Not sure people understand what is involved in getting gas out by fracking (which is what he is referring to). If I want to access to conventional gas reserves I drill a single hole or a series of holes from one location to drain the reservoir. Fracking involves drilling hundreds or thousands of holes a few hundred yards apart over a vast area. This is why it only really works in places with wide open spaces. Having a fracking site every few hundred yards across the Forest of Bowland is both impractical and probably not going to be too popular.


    That's one of the nicest pics on PB today - very nearly as nice as the moth and tomatoes.

    And, of course, the BGS were probably asked to say how much reserve there was. Not whether it was commercially extractable. Yes Minister basic grade stuff.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,156
    stodge said:

    I've spoken to a few friends and colleagues and a view I've heard goes something like this:

    "Someone somewhere is profiting from all this. They don't deserve to and the Government should be going after these undeserved profits and taxing them and giving the proceeds to the public to help us pay our bills"

    Executive pay is also getting noticed an becoming an issue and particularly the remuneration packages handed out to the senior managers of water companies for example. There's also the issue of foreign ownership - this is why nationalisation is popular. It's back to those notions of accountability and control that resonated so much in the EU debate.

    I do point out one of the organisations doing well is the Government via VAT - that elicits a fairly predictable response in terms of cutting VAT. I then point out the amount we are now paying in debt interest and servicing future debt and if you want to cut health, defence or education, be my guest but don't expect it to be popular.
    Fundamentally, because we are a net importer of energy, the profits from the high prices are being made where we can't tax them. As a country, the UK is poorer as a result.
  • You be careful you don't end up having to ban yourself for using the c-word!
    Conservative?
  • stodgestodge Posts: 14,469
    algarkirk said:

    Figures mentioned have been up to £100bn. To get it in perspective, if it were per annum that's about 18-20p on the basic rate of income tax.

    I've seen £95 billion so all in the same neck of the woods. That's not an inconsequential sum and should interest rates rise again that amount would also go up. Yes, perhaps inflation will help over time but we need to get the deficit under control and that will help with the debt.

    I've heard nothing from Liz Truss to make me think she has a grasp of this - it's all still interventionist magic money tree thinking that wouldn't have surprised had it come from John McDonnell.

    There seems this almost infantile belief tax cuts are a one way ticket to happiness - presumably she's kept the spending cut aspect quiet during the campaign.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,251
    algarkirk said:

    Figures mentioned have been up to £100bn. To get it in perspective, if it were per annum that's about 18-20p on the basic rate of income tax.

    Realistically I think £100bn covers about a year, and we are likely to need more than a year (could be less than a year if the war ends soon). But the way to look at it is maybe £150-200bn spread over 20 years. Energy is not going to cost this much in the future, and even if it somehow did we can transition to using less energy and an economy that matches the higher cost over a few years. We can't do that in six months.

    So it is more like 1-2p on income tax over 20 years rather than 20p on income tax in one year - and the taxes should of course come from wealth taxes rather than income tax anyway.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,933
    edited August 2022
    Chomsky is a genius in the field of linguistics. Rather like Dawkins, I fail to see why this qualifies him to pontificate outside his field of expertise.
    Or rather, why anyone listens to him more than any other random.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,129
    Why isn't there a huge campaign to reduce energy/gas use?

    Bin the Tesla. Get on your bike. Get that thermostat down and have shorter showers. Don't overfill the kettle.

    Find a partner to keep your bed warm at night. *Boris states down camera* "Let's shag our way to victory".
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,507
    Reading through an old thread, I came across this from 2018:

    Russia's strangehold on energy supplies to Eastern Europe will continue to wane. Norway's gas production is rising, Israel is coming on stream next year, and everyone is building LNG import terminals to benefit from new supplies from the US and Africa. (And the rise of Australian LNG means that gas from the Gulf will be increasingly directed towards Europe.)

    The moves to renewables in Europe - while they have sucked for many consumers - have had a similar effect.

    The Russian noose around Eastern Europe is slowly loosening.


    Ah well, we all make mistakes. But I tactfully won't identify the author!
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    Eabhal said:

    Why isn't there a huge campaign to reduce energy/gas use?

    Bin the Tesla. Get on your bike. Get that thermostat down and have shorter showers. Don't overfill the kettle.

    Find a partner to keep your bed warm at night. *Boris states down camera* "Let's shag our way to victory".

    I dimly remember the share a bath campaigns. But were they the 1973 crisis, or the 1976 drought?
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,507
    edited August 2022

    Conservative?
    Chomsky?
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,933
    Eabhal said:

    Why isn't there a huge campaign to reduce energy/gas use?

    Bin the Tesla. Get on your bike. Get that thermostat down and have shorter showers. Don't overfill the kettle.

    Find a partner to keep your bed warm at night. *Boris states down camera* "Let's shag our way to victory".

    This really is a mystery to me.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,295

    Conservative?
    That's not a swear word, it's a joke.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,507

    That's not a swear word, it's a joke.
    Jokes are funny. The Conservatives aren't.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,001
    Alistair said:

    Handy ONS actuarial stats.

    https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/birthsdeathsandmarriages/lifeexpectancies/articles/howhaslifeexpectancychangedovertime/2015-09-09

    In 1947 the average 65 year old male would have lived for another 11ish years

    By the 1980s it was only up to 13 years.

    Now it is more than 18 years.

    Life expectancy fell by 1.3 years for men last year

    https://www.theguardian.com/society/2021/sep/15/life-expectancy-in-england-falls-to-lowest-level-since-2011
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,933
    Carnyx said:

    I dimly remember the share a bath campaigns. But were they the 1973 crisis, or the 1976 drought?
    1976.
    In 1973 the bath was full of coal!
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,295
    dixiedean said:

    This really is a mystery to me.
    The answer is: we do not have a functioning government.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,129
    I had to explain to someone how the energy cap works to a maths grad at work today. Didn't have a clue (knew where the Danube was, mind).

    Who came up with that silly term? Miliband?
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,507
    dixiedean said:

    1976.
    In 1973 the bath was full of coal!
    Coal? You were lucky. When I were a lad we 'ad to wash in gravel.
  • HYUFD said:

    Life expectancy fell by 1.3 years for men last year

    https://www.theguardian.com/society/2021/sep/15/life-expectancy-in-england-falls-to-lowest-level-since-2011
    12 years of Tory mis-rule!
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,129
    Carnyx said:

    I dimly remember the share a bath campaigns. But were they the 1973 crisis, or the 1976 drought?
    I'll ask my Dad.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,295
    edited August 2022
    ydoethur said:

    Jokes are funny. The Conservatives aren't.
    I refer you to definition 4.

    https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/joke

    A laughably worthless thing or person; a sham.
    ...
    The president was a joke.


    This government is a joke.
    The Conservative Party is a joke.

    None of which is funny.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,933

    The answer is: we do not have a functioning government.
    Yes, but. The only word on this has been that it's up to individuals. Which is actively choosing NOT to do it.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,001

    If polling is to be believed, urban, middle class lefty English people are actually more unionist than right-leaning working class, leavers.
    Pre Brexit maybe not post Brexit. While in Scotland Remainers are more likely to back independence than Leavers, yet in 2014 it was working class Scots who voted Yes to independence and middle class Scots who voted No.

    Chomsky though is basically a Corbynite
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,350

    12 years of Tory mis-rule!
    Wasn't it at its highest ever in 2019?
This discussion has been closed.