Plissken wrote:
Curiosity wrote:
Not to mention that with the current budget deficit, we're increasing that number by more than 5% per year. So, in less than a decade it'll be over 100% of GDP, and rising. That is, unquestionably, unhealthy (and doesn't include the figures for the bank bailouts, after which it is already at about 150%). It's also a worse deficit than in 1976, when we had to be bailed out by the IMF before our currency was devalued.
Because we are pursuing entirely the wrong course - I'm all for paying off debt, but slashing income and increasing costs seems to be a pretty weird way of going about it.
But you said that our debt level was fine? And in what way is reducing costs and increasing income (raised VAT and income tax) slashing income and increasing costs?
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Did you notice that Bob Diamond is a non-dom for tax purposes? Oh, and so are those 231 people who shared half a billion quid each - or four times the amount Barclays paid in corporation tax last year.
That's the fault of an overly complicated tax regime rather than of banks. My current company redomiciled to Holland to massively reduce its tax burden, after several years of pleading with the Chancellor that we'd rather pay tax here at a reasonable rate. Ultimately, companies have a legal obligation to shareholders to maximise profits, so many redomicile themselves abroad. The problem is not people taking advantage of the existing rules, it is the rules themselves. I read an article somewhere saying that if we reduced corporation tax rates significantly but simplified the system, we'd actually get more money. But I'm not the expert on this, APOD is.
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So you didn't notice that 110,000 public sector jobs disappeared in the last three months. Record job losses, plus pensions cut, retirement age lifted, plus salaries frozen. They've never had it so good!
Fair enough, but the rest of the market is experiencing the exact same thing. Making out that it's not universal is incorrect.
And raising the retirement age is an eminently sensible thing to do. In fact, I'd argue it's complete insanity to do otherwise, and runs completely contrary to the whole concept of pensions.
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Absolutely missed the point - public sector pay is alright, so I want private sector to match it. You can't level a playing field downwards. After all, that is what competition is about, right?
But you're complaining about private sector people earning too much. How can you match it to public sector without levelling it downwards? I understand pensions and that final salary ones, as Craster has pointed out numerous times, are simply not possible to pay and budget for correctly.
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Those people (bankers) who have created a large part of this problem and have not paid for it (figuratively and literally) at all. In fact, they are making more and got better off!
I'm still not sure how everything is their fault. I recognise the bailout, but all the figures discussed both here and in the media ignore the bailout monies. If the increased deficit and the recession were caused by the banks then all our prosperity in the previous years were caused by them, and our proposed economic recovery is completely reliant on them.
Loads of bankers lost their jobs (Lehmann Brothers were not a small company, and that's just one example), not to mention IT support, back office, secretarial and all the other things that make a company work. Not everyone 'got away with it'. Sure, some high profile people did, and people still making massive amounts of money for the banks will still get paid massive amounts of money.
But, to be honest, that makes me less annoyed than Habib Beye getting paid 2 million quid a year for literally doing nothing.