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Baroness Thatcher - Dead / RIP



Westdene Seagull

aka Cap'n Carl Firecrotch
NSC Patron
Oct 27, 2003
21,526
The arse end of Hangleton
I think the point being made is that this would not be happening if they had not been privatised. Weren't people supposed to get a better deal because competition would drive the price down and the companies would be streamlined and efficient.

Possibly but how do we know what the price would now be given the required investment over the years if the utilities hadn't been privatised ?

Hard one to call really.
 




KZNSeagull

Well-known member
Nov 26, 2007
21,094
Wolsingham, County Durham
I think the point being made is that this would not be happening if they had not been privatised. Weren't people supposed to get a better deal because competition would drive the price down and the companies would be streamlined and efficient.

No-one can answer that. But price controls were in place to avoid the privatised companies hiking the prices up. These were scrapped in 2002. But competition meant that consumers could swap suppliers and get the best rate around - no-one was moaning about that. Rather like the other thread on here about BT.
 


Biffer

Active member
Jul 13, 2003
670
When you go out for a meal ( and I know you like doing that :p ) the chef will be aiming for 85% GP

In 20 years of producing GPs for chefs ranging from the boozer down the road to Marco Pierre White, I have never seen any chef hit anywhere near 85%.
70% is an impressive return, the majority hit just above 60%.
 


BadFish

Huge Member
Oct 19, 2003
18,201
Possibly but how do we know what the price would now be given the required investment over the years if the utilities hadn't been privatised ?

Hard one to call really.

True enough, Although we do know that profits would have been that high and that when they were privatised we were promised a more competitive rate due to competition. If companies are making that much profit surely it must be suspect that the competition is as strong as it should be.
 


BadFish

Huge Member
Oct 19, 2003
18,201
No-one can answer that. But price controls were in place to avoid the privatised companies hiking the prices up. These were scrapped in 2002. But competition meant that consumers could swap suppliers and get the best rate around - no-one was moaning about that. Rather like the other thread on here about BT.

Trouble is you have a choice of either large corporations or governments running utilities, neither of which i trust to do the right thing by the consumer. We have a few community utility companies that help to keep prices low. Is there such a thing in the UK?
 




Silk

New member
May 4, 2012
2,488
Uckfield
No-one can answer that. But price controls were in place to avoid the privatised companies hiking the prices up. These were scrapped in 2002. But competition meant that consumers could swap suppliers and get the best rate around - no-one was moaning about that. Rather like the other thread on here about BT.

And what about when they operate a virtual cartel and keep all the prices more or less the same?
 


Herr Tubthumper

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 11, 2003
62,697
The Fatherland
And yet supermarkets will make more than that out of most people every month. When you go out for a meal ( and I know you like doing that :p ) the chef will be aiming for 85% GP. I'm really not sure that energy firms making that much money is excessive compared to profits of other companies most of us use.

Are you seriously comparing a public utility and necessity with a restaurant?
 








Soulman

New member
Oct 22, 2012
10,966
Sompting
I think the point being made is that this would not be happening if they had not been privatised. Weren't people supposed to get a better deal because competition would drive the price down and the companies would be streamlined and efficient.

However, wasn't it "to comply with EU rules" that the trains were sold off? Also, the sell-offs of strategic utilities came with the "golden share" whereby control remained within our borders. Who was it who scrapped that? One G. Brown.
 


However, wasn't it "to comply with EU rules" that the trains were sold off? Also, the sell-offs of strategic utilities came with the "golden share" whereby control remained within our borders. Who was it who scrapped that? One G. Brown.

I think the EU "rules" said nothing about selling the railways off, the "rules" required that the cost of the infrastructure on which said trains run needed to be identified separately. That could have been done quite easily without privatising the railway.

Robert Adley, Conservative MP for Christchurch and unashamed railway enthusiast described the method used to privatise the railways as "a Poll Tax on wheels" (he also described Mrs T as the "Finchley Fishwife"). Sadly he died before he could use his position as Chair of the Commons Select Committee on Transport to influence things. I believe he favoured a return to the pre nationalisation "Big Four" companies, each responsible for trains and infrastructure.

...And with regard to the current utilities set up I suggest that this is the best way to describe them Urban Dictionary: confusopoly. I have long ago given up trying to work out who exactly is cheapest.
 




Soulman

New member
Oct 22, 2012
10,966
Sompting
I daresay these lot photographed this week celebrating Thatchers death, will probably be out again for the funeral. Spot the ones that were of an age to remember/born when Thatcher was in power.
2vnl8jo.jpg

2duweo8.jpg

2hp2c29.jpg

ixs9s2.jpg

2d2a8pg.jpg
 




Silk

New member
May 4, 2012
2,488
Uckfield
I daresay these lot photographed this week celebrating Thatchers death, will probably be out again for the funeral. Spot the ones that were of an age to remember/born when Thatcher was in power.
2vnl8jo.jpg

2duweo8.jpg

2hp2c29.jpg

ixs9s2.jpg

2d2a8pg.jpg

Really undecided about this. Didn't like her. But this all does seem in poor taste. Having said that, she is perceived to have caused misery for millions. At a time when so many are saying how wonderful she was, it's important that both sets of voices are heard.
 




BLOCK F

Well-known member
Feb 26, 2009
6,723
I think the point being made is that this would not be happening if they had not been privatised. Weren't people supposed to get a better deal because competition would drive the price down and the companies would be streamlined and efficient.

Can you remember how 'efficient' the old gas board was and how long it used to take to get a phone sorted out,for instance.
Public services were often shite and wasteful.
Blimey,we have enough trouble with an inefficient public sector in this country at the moment.Heaven help us if the state still tried to run all the bits that were privatised!
 


Soulman

New member
Oct 22, 2012
10,966
Sompting
Really undecided about this. Didn't like her. But this all does seem in poor taste. Having said that, she is perceived to have caused misery for millions. At a time when so many are saying how wonderful she was, it's important that both sets of voices are heard.

Yes, i agree. I just can not understand how you would have to about 39 years old now to have even seen the last year of Thatchers reign, even then you would have only just left school. To be affected by the policies that some hate, you would have to be about 47 years old. If it was the older generation and those affected, then i could understand, but most pictured are barely out of their teens.
I do not agree with a state paid funeral, but to perhaps have to witness unrest on the day of Thatchers funeral, from some people born in the early 90's seems wrong.
 


Silk

New member
May 4, 2012
2,488
Uckfield
Yes, i agree. I just can not understand how you would have to about 39 years old now to have even seen the last year of Thatchers reign, even then you would have only just left school. To be affected by the policies that some hate, you would have to be about 47 years old. If it was the older generation and those affected, then i could understand, but most pictured are barely out of their teens.
I do not agree with a state paid funeral, but to perhaps have to witness unrest on the day of Thatchers funeral, from some people born in the early 90's seems wrong.

Hmm. I'm not sure. It's OK, and indeed very important, that young people should be involved in acts of remembrance concerning the world wars, the holocaust, Hiroshima, etc. even though they were not there. So I'm not convinced they shouldn't be involved in this (though I wouldn't compare Thatcher's doings with those events). Its all just a question of the manner in which it is done, and being fallible humans, some people will just get it wrong.
 






Soulman

New member
Oct 22, 2012
10,966
Sompting
I'll not state my stance on this, but here's another viewpoint on maggies passing. What are your views on this "campaign"

View attachment 41635


I do not agree with 10m being spent on a state funeral. I also do not agree with Billions being given in Foreign Aid, especially when the Indian Prime Minister stated that his country did not want the 620m that we keep shelling out.
So we could cut back all round and help fund the cause in the photo.
 




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