1) You always talk about the benefit to our pensions of privatisation of public utilities but it is a stupid argument IMO. If you want to make the case that we all benefit, then it certainly isn't as egalitarian as public ownership so that the least well off can be properly looked after. With pensions, the bigger your pension the more you benefit - and the poor don't really do private pensions do they?
2) That 215% is a projection for the winter and probably reflects the rise from what was £1300 pa for the average household to the revised projection of £4600 (up from £4200 2 weeks ago). And even 74% is appalling when you consider the average EU rise is half that figure.
Shocking
Half of the gas we use comes out of OUR North sea.
We need a temporary price cap on the primary producers.
I don't think that Liz is reading the room.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-62513966
Nobody is suggesting that companies should suffer windfall tax on products that involve choice, or that energy companies don't need profit to re-invest. Neither should they be taken into public hands (that would cost billions and many of our pension share investments are bound up in them)
But the chickens have come home to roost.
I have share holdings. But will not invest in oil or utilities I believe should be in public hands. And to be making vast sums of profit on the back of bulk buying, and upping the price before the stocks being used have reached the level of cost that caused that rise are in use, is immoral. But that is what is happening.
The government has spent a lot of money trying to prop up those minor players who were going bust. It's time time to tax those who have profited in folk's misery.
And I think a lot of Torys are temporary Socialists on this one.
im highlighting the selectiveness, shareholders are bad hedge funds narrative, ignores the vast majority of people in the country are beneficaries. accept the point on public ownship and will see you with argument about public money then needed for investment. it is all very selective, tax on one company but not another, chap on radio this morning said windfall taxs should not apply to Drax or other electricity producers as they need to reinvest.
if the 215% is projection, then why are they not projecting for other countries. other than France they are all rising. Germany has already risen ~60% and rising further as they remove cap limits. so the information is clearly false.
Your posts read like they've been typed out on a 1990s mobile phone and you've been given a 30 second time limit to bash it all out. It's really quite difficult to understand what you're trying to say.
And your idea that it is somehow a problem that public money is used for investment is utterly bizarre. That's part of public ownership - the nation pays for the upkeep and modern investment but also gets to regulate what it charges. Far preferable to privatisation which hasn't worked at all - fat profits going to shareholders, not enough investment, the state has bailed out failing companies and the poor are not protected from dreadful price hikes.
I notice you ignored my comment that even the 73% increase (your figure) is almost twice as high as in the EU.
I notice you ignored my comment that even the 73% increase (your figure) is almost twice as high as in the EU.
my point is the data is flawed, the numbers are not consistent with other reports.
And my point is "why make that point?" when the real issue remains that our rises are considerably higher than those in the EU, even if one tweet has exaggerated the numbers?
Seems to be a lot of talk of £5000 energy cap, that said I think some of the usual tabloid suspects are in bidding war.
They need to be careful printing these kind of headlines, with a complete absence of clarity and leadership from the government a lot of people really are terrified
If anything it shows the clear and almost total disconnect between Tory party members, who Tweedledum and Tweedlecomplete****ingidiot are talking to pretty much exclusively, and the wider public.
EDF is an interesting one as they are in big trouble and about to be fully nationalised, they have lost 1bn a month over the last 6 months as half(?) of their nuclear capability is offline and they are using much more gas than they otherwise would - the taxpayer will have to pick up the bill. One needs to ask why half of their nuclear is offline at once - planned maintenance or breakdown from lack of investment?
The other meme doing the rounds is the one about EDF UK subsidising the French 4% price cap, but EDF UK has been making losses recently, it may well make a profit this year but nothing like the billions that are required to fund the French 4% price cap and EDF UK cannot hike their prices up over here above the UK price cap.
I see Gordon Brown has called for temporary nationalisation of the energy suppliers to presumably cap the price paid by consumers with the taxpayer or more likely borrowing (our grandchildren) picking up the tab as they will have to do with Covid. I can see some merits on this but long term nationalisation is not the answer imo. With every government department fighting over a finite pot of money, long term investment in infrastructure would inevitably be put off in favour of other priorities of the government of the day, plus of course you could have the likes of Grant Schapps, Chris Grayling or Nadine Dorries in charge of our energy supply which would be fun. You could nationalise BP I suppose but the same thing applies.
Targeting help seems the most reasonable solution at the moment, but if this price spike carries on long term, then gawd only knows what the answer is.
EDF is an interesting one as they are in big trouble and about to be fully nationalised, they have lost 1bn a month over the last 6 months as half(?) of their nuclear capability is offline and they are using much more gas than they otherwise would - the taxpayer will have to pick up the bill. One needs to ask why half of their nuclear is offline at once - planned maintenance or breakdown from lack of investment?
The other meme doing the rounds is the one about EDF UK subsidising the French 4% price cap, but EDF UK has been making losses recently, it may well make a profit this year but nothing like the billions that are required to fund the French 4% price cap and EDF UK cannot hike their prices up over here above the UK price cap.
I see Gordon Brown has called for temporary nationalisation of the energy suppliers to presumably cap the price paid by consumers with the taxpayer or more likely borrowing (our grandchildren) picking up the tab as they will have to do with Covid. I can see some merits on this but long term nationalisation is not the answer imo. With every government department fighting over a finite pot of money, long term investment in infrastructure would inevitably be put off in favour of other priorities of the government of the day, plus of course you could have the likes of Grant Schapps, Chris Grayling or Nadine Dorries in charge of our energy supply which would be fun. You could nationalise BP I suppose but the same thing applies.
Targeting help seems the most reasonable solution at the moment, but if this price spike carries on long term, then gawd only knows what the answer is.
And they are are doing the energy companies’ job for them by scaring people into signing up for inappropriate fixed rate deals. The Government should be stepping in to regulate these deals.
And my point is "why make that point?" when the real issue remains that our rises are considerably higher than those in the EU, even if one tweet has exaggerated the numbers?