spring hall convert
Well-known member
The rate this is going, there's a decent chance he's PM after the election....Does he know he is getting the sack after the election?
The rate this is going, there's a decent chance he's PM after the election....Does he know he is getting the sack after the election?
You'll be in luck if your garden centre is in Belize, Panama, British Virgin Islands etc..... etc.....Do you like Corbyn believe that there is a money tree ?? ......would be nice !!! I`ll ask at my local garden centre ..
I'm not convinced:
a) that so many of the highest earners would actually leave under a system with slightly higher corporation and income tax (in both cases the Labour proposals are for tax rates which are no higher, and in many cases lower, than many other successful industrialised countries who don't seem to have a problem with mass exodus of higher earners)
b) that the highest earners are necessarily always the "highest contributors"
c) that even if some of them did go, the country would actually be significantly worse off - it would help the net migration figures after all, and enable us perhaps to recruit in their place a few more useful doctors and scientists from abroad without breaching the net migration figures.
and finally - I think the economic risk of losing significant businesses (or parts of businesses) which move to other countries because of Brexit (because they can't get the skills here any more, or because they need - like financial service companies - to be within the EU, or because they don't want to pay tariffs on their supply chains), is massively higher than the economic risk of a few oligarchs and rich parasites leaving because they can't facing a few more percentage points of tax to contribute to a decent society with good health and social care and public infrastructure.
But why do they save a dollar out of a pound, very strange
I get the idea with or without typo.....I guess same story is used for pounds euros dollars dinah and every currency
You'll be in luck if your garden centre is in Belize, Panama, British Virgin Islands etc..... etc.....
Labour would increase taxes to their highest level since the aftermath of the Second World War but would still not raise enough money to pay for its spending pledges, an independent assessment of the party’s manifesto has concluded.
The Institute for Fiscal Studies said that Jeremy Corbyn’s party would saddle individuals and businesses with at least £41 billion of new taxes while cutting the deficit more slowly. The think tank suggested that Labour had an £11 billion shortfall in its tax and spending plans, in part because the party had made “factual” errors in calculating its tax package.
https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/...d-be-highest-since-second-world-war-dftx8s0bf
Yes, I've read the IFS analysis. The IFS have a lot of good micro-economists, but as many competent economists have pointed out, their current analysis of the party manifestos does not, for some reason, take account of the macro-economic impacts of the different spending and borrowing plans, and as a result their critique of the Labour manifesto is deeply flawed - see, to take one accessible example, the work of Simon Wren-Lewis (economics professor at Oxford) who very much does understand macro-economics:
https://mainlymacro.blogspot.co.uk/2017/05/growth-will-be-lower-if-conservatives.html
Yes, I've read the IFS analysis. The IFS have a lot of good micro-economists, but as many competent economists have pointed out, their current analysis of the party manifestos does not, for some reason, take account of the macro-economic impacts of the different spending and borrowing plans, and as a result their critique of the Labour manifesto is deeply flawed - see, to take one accessible example, the work of Simon Wren-Lewis (economics professor at Oxford) who very much does understand macro-economics:
https://mainlymacro.blogspot.co.uk/2017/05/growth-will-be-lower-if-conservatives.html
That's quite a glaring omission (if true) from a respected institution often used by Jezza to attack the government at PMQ's. Is the IFS critique of the Tory manifesto equally floored then?
Btw competent economist predicting things = oxymoron (sorry cheap shot).
I agree that extra public investment should stimulate the economy and therefore the tax take. The link you have posted is
not however an impartial economic analysis but an opinion piece full of unsubstantiated assumptions about interest rates, impacts of immigration and the relative Brexit negotiating skills of different politicians.
The Tories tax plans are currently completely unknown, if you hadn't noticed.
The Tories tax plans are currently completely unknown, if you hadn't noticed.
I'm not convinced:
a) that so many of the highest earners would actually leave under a system with slightly higher corporation and income tax (in both cases the Labour proposals are for tax rates which are no higher, and in many cases lower, than many other successful industrialised countries who don't seem to have a problem with mass exodus of higher earners)
b) that the highest earners are necessarily always the "highest contributors"
c) that even if some of them did go, the country would actually be significantly worse off - it would help the net migration figures after all, and enable us perhaps to recruit in their place a few more useful doctors and scientists from abroad without breaching the net migration figures.
and finally - I think the economic risk of losing significant businesses (or parts of businesses) which move to other countries because of Brexit (because they can't get the skills here any more, or because they need - like financial service companies - to be within the EU, or because they don't want to pay tariffs on their supply chains), is massively higher than the economic risk of a few oligarchs and rich parasites leaving because they can't facing a few more percentage points of tax to contribute to a decent society with good health and social care and public infrastructure.
Why do you think there are so many French high earners in London?
Yes, it's a blog (opinion piece) rather than an academic research paper, but I cited it simply because it contains a relatively accessible (to non-economists) critique of the recent IFS analysis of the party manifestos, which as many economists have noted fails adequately to take account of the macro-economic effects of public spending on growth rates, and doesn't therefore warrant the excessively negative conclusions about the Labour manifesto which was given in the piece from the Times cited by another poster.
At 62, I'm probably older than some of them, as it happens. I doubt I'll really have nightmares but, yes, there is something about that red-faced, finger-jabbing, "let me tell you...." mode from fat bald right-wing white men (of any age), that I find slightly scary, if I'm honest.
As far as my own perspective evolving with age is concerned, if anything, my views are rather more left-wing than when I was younger (and I wasn't exactly right of centre then).