Beach Hut
Brighton Bhuna Boy
Bit like our industry being pissed up the wall in the eighties then?
All the ones that were low profit margins as opposed to services
Bit like our industry being pissed up the wall in the eighties then?
The difference is the size.
Our current debt is £2311.6 billion, and increasing by £122 billion this year.
Any ideas how to reduce that?
TB
I know I'm not unique in being able to use a calculator, but that equates to £35,000 (ish) for every man women and child in the UK.Our current debt is £2311.6 billion, and increasing by £122 billion this year.
All the ones that were low profit margins as opposed to services
Pretty sure this has already been posted, but is it a lack of understanding, as you put it, or a lack of willingness to suffer in order to solve a problem that was not theirs in the first place?
You say the choice is between "austerity and bankruptcy". For a lot of ordinary people, that reads "bankruptcy or bankruptcy" on a personal level. Do you honestly expect people to stand up and take a punishment for the 'greater good' of their country, when they didn't cause the problem in the first place and won't see the benefits if it is overcome?
I know I'm not unique in being able to use a calculator, but that equates to £35,000 (ish) for every man women and child in the UK.
TB
They tend to use the % of GDP for league tables, and this one from the Economics Blog is as good as any.How much is everyone elses?
In some respects you have to ask does it matter?No you misunderstand, Is our debt level greater or less that other countries say France or Italy?
Thankfully the coal is still there.Ah but should we have trashed it all? Steel? Coal? Rail
but they did cause the problem. they dont pay their taxes, have a large workforce as part of the state with nepotism and inefficency rife. they borrowed heavily on the back of being in the Euro, benefiting from German economic prudence. they used Daddy's credit card to fund a life of luxury thats been found out, they lied through their teeth about revenues and GDP numbers for years. its really, really shit for the farmers, the bar owners, etc who where making a living through their own efforts and hopfully they will be best placed to recover quickest once they default and leave the Euro.
Ah but should we have trashed it all? Steel? Coal? Rail
but they did cause the problem. they dont pay their taxes, have a large workforce as part of the state with nepotism and inefficency rife. they borrowed heavily on the back of being in the Euro, benefiting from German economic prudence. they used Daddy's credit card to fund a life of luxury thats been found out, they lied through their teeth about revenues and GDP numbers for years. its really, really shit for the farmers, the bar owners, etc who where making a living through their own efforts and hopfully they will be best placed to recover quickest once they default and leave the Euro.
In some respects you have to ask does it matter?
That sort of debt will never, IMO, be paid. Which in-turn will effect our country for a very very long time.
Despite what some politicians will tell us, there is no easy answers, only pain I'm afraid.
TB
I disagree.
When the world was doing fine was when we should have saved for this rainy day, not pissed our money up the wall.
TB
But you miss the point of why this weekend is important for everyone - The French elections mean there is another choice for greece, if the French start to renegotiate the previous agreements it allows Greece a door to ask for its terms to be renegotiated and that will tell how much the Germans (and everyone else) want to keep them in.
Coal was pointless as cheaper abroad so was steel.
I believe we still have a railways as I intend to catch to 0701 to London tomorrow
Coal was pointless as cheaper abroad so was steel.
Its not cheaper now though is it?
How much is that rail ticket?
I would have hoped the Tories wouldn't have got us into such a deep mess, but you are right I and we will never know.But you seem to think that we had the only government that did this - we didn't. My point is that the tories would have done exactly the same as New Labour - the proof is that until 2008 not one of them was worried about it. They never saw the banking crisis coming and many had their noses in the trough too.
Was this ultimately the case though? Low cost centres are only low cost initially. When everyone starts to purchase from such places the simple laws of supply and demand raise the prices.