Mellor 3 Ward 4
Well-known member
One country has sanctions imposed on itself by the rest of world
One country has sanctions imposed on itself by the itself
Wonder which 2 countries these would be?
Yep, and KS intends to do SFA about it.
One country has sanctions imposed on itself by the rest of world
One country has sanctions imposed on itself by the itself
Wonder which 2 countries these would be?
Yep, and KS intends to do SFA about it.
Absolutely this. UK business seems to take the attitude that 'productivity improvement' can be achieved by reducing headcount and asking fewer people to do more, but missing out the crucial step of investing in the tools to actually allow this to be achieved... reflects investment made by employers in updated plant and machinery as opposed to lazy workers.
While with her other face bemoaning the lazy French no doubtThe reason, apparently, was explained back in 2012, by Liz Truss, among others:
“Once they enter the workplace, the British are among the worst idlers in the world. We work among the lowest hours, we retire early and our productivity is poor.
A bit more punchy than Education, Education, Education
"Growth, growth, growth" is what Guppy says when he is visiting ladyboyz in Thailand and trying to get half a teacake to impres them
Regards
DF
Yep, and KS intends to do SFA about it.
Well the last 12 years hasn't worked, I think we're getting to the point where someone else needs a go.
We've gone backwards
Has the real Fairy gone forever ?
...a list of three rhetorical slogan will not help the tories now. It's a toxic brand with the majority of the public at the moment.....
That was probably the highlight of his speech.
The rest was luke-warmly applauded rhetoric and a probable U-turn regarding railway nationalisation.
Regulations are like taxes, they are indeed a drain on business. Unfortunately though, they are both absolutely necessary. You cannot continue to cut tax because otherwise things stop working. You cannot continue to remove regulation, because otherwise you end up with the nation acting as a giant sweatshop. This, to me, is basic stuff.
More accurately, the Tories always talk about lowering taxes but never actually do it. They might lower income tax because that suits the rich, but the overall tax burden usually rises. I can't say I've ever heard much about cutting regulation except in a London/finance sense, but obviously it has now been identified as a huge Brexit win, so this is where we're at. They'll end up deregulating to the detriment of everyone I suspect. Labour might even pander to it now that they are gutlessly following the Brexit mantra themselves.absolutly agree, a balance has to be found. the point was we've heard about lower taxes and cutting regulation for years (at least a decade from the reference) but that hasnt happened.
I can't say I bother listening to Starmer anymore. Growth might be conjured but will be severely hampered because of Brexit. No getting around that.as for Starmer speech sounds like might have an ambition but lacking in any substance. growth will be conjured if we really want it. Industry Strategy Council sounds good if it can do something and not be just a well meaning quango reporting every quarter.
Agree - my point was in response to your comment that :
"One country has sanctions imposed on itself by the itself"
Yet KS spoke last week about not wanting, or even suggesting a second referendum - why is he so scared of saying Brexit is bad for the Country?
And the trouble with this old trope is that you choose to write in pidgeon English, making it barely legible - but I digress.
Regulations are like taxes, they are indeed a drain on business. Unfortunately though, they are both absolutely necessary. You cannot continue to cut tax because otherwise things stop working. You cannot continue to remove regulation, because otherwise you end up with the nation acting as a giant sweatshop. This, to me, is basic stuff.
So far, we've heard a lot of bullshit about cutting red tape, and so far the biggest change this has made is that untreated shit now flows down our rivers. I'm looking forward -as we all are - to the deregulation of the farming industry so that we can import chlorinated chicken from the US and mistreated animal produce from Australia. And I'm pretty sure any deregulation of the labour market will end up similarly advantageous to us all.
Call me strange, but I just felt things were better when we had the protection of European-wide river, food and Labour regulation. And tax was lower. And food banks weren't necessary. Nobody was calling us lazy back then. Maybe the Tories should just introduce a day for clapping workers to make themselves feel better? It worked a treat for NHS workers.
Arguably less important
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How do you like it?
How do you like it?
One for the oldies out there
Andrea something or other