Would that be John Maynard, or his brother, Milton?And they want KEYNES back yeah!!!!
J.M.KWould that be John Maynard, or his brother, Milton?
They cannot change the terms of the tracker once the mortgage has been set up so everyone already on a tracker rate would benefit.
I have one guy who got a £ 1m mortgage and is paying 0.99% for term now after paying 0.1% for 2 years , he has saved around £ 100 000 in mortgage payments so far from the 5.5% BBR when I arranged it for him in 2008.
Tracker rates are often +/ - the lending bank base rate though not BoE and there is no compulsion to follow suit. I can't see banks reducing their base rate to zero.
Nice to see an intelligent thread, with no bitching initiated by the inhouse troll Kraay.
Well the Jap ones did
On a more serious note, I'm pretty sure that any cut in interest rates would be unlikely to be passed on to the consumer. it would just increase the margins for the banks and building societies. Add to this the Beechcroft Solution, employment laws being relaxed to allow " No Fault " dismissals, and we have almost managed to return to feudal times and ergo,wage slavery.
Beachcroft's proposal got torn apart on Newsnight; no one had any evidence to show that tighter employment law restricted growth. There was a correlation between growth and tighter employment legislation though.
I am one of the lucky ones that has a mortgage with Nationwide taken out five years ago. Rate cannot be more than 2% above base rate. This promise has been removed from new mortgages. Think Cheltenham and Gloucester is the only other one that had this clause.
Its very worrying that a Tory think tank would even consider it. Where I work, the staff are not entitled to annual wage reviews and as such have not had a pay rise for several years ,can you imagine someone who is struggling to pay the bills having to gamble their job on asking for a pay rise ? The Tory's are always trying to cut " red tape " to " boost " small businesses but, at what cost? I'm glad I'm not a young person today.... I feel little hope for any sort of future.
Beachcroft's proposal got torn apart on Newsnight; no one had any evidence to show that tighter employment law restricted growth. There was a correlation between growth and tighter employment legislation though.
I have an insight into many firms figures, and meet many businessmen.
Some director shareholders with working class roots who purport to be socialists, are still making very big profits, but are using the flat economy to pin staff down with several years of pay freezes, harsher contracts, and intimidation into longer freebie hours etc.
It's interesting how money lust corrupts, even for so called Thatcher-Cameron haters.
Although no particular effect on me personally, in light of what I've seen, I have become pro employees rights.
Tracker rates are often +/ - the lending bank base rate though not BoE and there is no compulsion to follow suit. I can't see banks reducing their base rate to zero.