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Re: The state benefits system mega-thread. Many merged.
Well off pensioners almost certainly have had their fair share of pain but they're well off and can obviously afford to receive a little less.
Our children are not to blame for the mess we're in but they're going to have to pay for it their whole lives and work longer because of it. That's not fair either. Many pensioners are really struggling, however, and it'd be wrong to expect them to pay more/receive less but a good number are doing very nicely thank you and although that may be down to their prudence, they can't really expect to be immune form the pain any more than our kids can. It may be unfair but blame is irrelevant because you can only take from those who have something. |
Re: The state benefits system mega-thread. Many merged.
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My Dad get 28.5 k a year pension and still gets state pension yes he paid his stamp and yes he should get it but with people living longer the figures keep rising yet no one ever brings it up. When is it to much ? when its 200 billion in 2030? and I bet the sick and unemployed are still blamed then |
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Ratio is everything for the simple reason that that's how the debt burden of economies are judged. I seem to have to repeat that over and over again. Strangely enough nation states aren't households and shouldn't be run like them. It gets really boring have to say that over and over again too. What do poor people do with money? Do they stash it in the Cayman Islands or do they, perhaps, spend it? There is a multiplier effect, which is why welfare cuts have had a pretty bad effect on the Greek economy. The IMF actually mentioned that that multiplier was worse than 1 in the case of Greece - they anticipated it being 0.5. Sorry, again I'm bringing facts and economics into an attempt to bash welfare. I'll stop. ---------- Post added at 19:07 ---------- Previous post was at 19:01 ---------- Quote:
A good number are doing very nicely and it's far less to do with prudence and far more to do with generous final salary pension schemes, subsidised by those currently working and far more generous than their schemes, alongside rampant property price inflation. We have an entire generation that have had massively good fortune. It's not that hard to say 'Lucky them' rather than trying to make out they were somehow so much 'better' than following generations. I have no idea why people refuse to say that in many cases it's purely about when they were born, or that it's those who are working who are footing the bill in a variety of ways. If we follow the kind of policies you seem to want our children won't be able to 'pay for it' because we'll have failed to provide them the education and infrastructure they need to be competitive in the future, and be leeching what wealth they do have from them in overpriced housing, which is nothing more than a transfer of wealth to the well housed from those who are not. ---------- Post added at 19:11 ---------- Previous post was at 19:07 ---------- Quote:
That said, share prices are inflated through the roof. So if your plan is heavy on stocks you're good to go. Most aren't though, because at some point that bubble will brutally burst. |
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You say that I think everybody on benefits sits on their bloody ass and is a scrounger/skiver and that I misrepresent the facts because of my deep prejudices about benefit claimants. Those are unpleasant accusations. Substantiate them. |
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---------- Post added at 22:01 ---------- Previous post was at 21:57 ---------- Any way maybe the answer with state pensions is to scrap them all together and simply have an old age benefit which would only be given to pensioners who didn't have x amount income per year |
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Re: The state benefits system mega-thread. Many merged.
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So, according to the pie chart in this article: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti...12billion.html
The majority of welfare is spent on pensions. Would anyone object to the pension pot being cut drastically? |
Re: The state benefits system mega-thread. Many merged.
Personally, I would cut the tax credits. Saves a lot of money in one go right there.
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I'll let you explain to the poor old biddy next door how you're going to reduce her pension.:erm: |
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Re: The state benefits system mega-thread. Many merged.
Just look at how small the JSA figure is relative to everything. The Housing benefit is shared amongst all of them ESA has doubled but that will be because everyone is on it now.
15 billion to the sick disabled and unemployed out of a total tax and NI take of 600 billion. Even if you add the tax credits to it makes in 40 billion that is still <8% How many of these claimants do you think do not need the money? 10% 4 billion out of 600? 20% 8 billion? The figures make it clear to me the cut they make are not going to all of a sudden make the tax payer better off then we will never see a penny of it anyway ---------- Post added at 14:36 ---------- Previous post was at 14:34 ---------- Quote:
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Re: The state benefits system mega-thread. Many merged.
I asked about pensions, because you can guarantee someone will look at that pie chart and say that the pensioners need to have curs made as well. I don't think it is so much how much a pensioner gets, more the fact that more and more people now compared to 100 years ago are reaching a pensionable age.
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Re: The state benefits system mega-thread. Many merged.
As I said earlier. a cut of around 6% on all benefits will sort it.
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