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Re: 'Shock' Contraction in the UK economy
as I said ignition if tax cuts dont have other consequences such as spending cuts then no problem, but in this case it isnt the case. Whats going on now is basically giving money back to people who dont need it so much and taking it away from others who need it more simply because the tories think its otherwise 'unfair'.
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Re: 'Shock' Contraction in the UK economy
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The company I work for have invented a medical patch that uses Manuka Honey to aid wounds naturally. They've had to postpone expansion into the USA due the state of the UK's economy including the recent fuel and VAT hikes. |
Re: 'Shock' Contraction in the UK economy
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http://www.indexmundi.com/sweden/unemployment_rate.html Not immune despite not having much of a financial services sector, and it should be noted Sweden have been rolling back the size of their state. Also noteworthy is that Sweden have been paying down their deficit for quite some time and are very happy about it. How odd given that running deficits is apparently business as usual. Australia also did much the same thing, a huge austerity package relative to ours, however they actually paid off their public sector debt, in full, and had funds in the bank to throw at it. We entered in a totally different situation, even without stimulus spending the structural deficit was unsustainable. Quote:
Interestingly Germany is already engaged in austerity measures. http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2010/06/...erity-package/ Quote:
They seem to be doing ok despite the impending austerity bite. http://online.wsj.com/article/BT-CO-...12-705004.html Quote:
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The issue with the ConDem policies isn't austerity it's the lack of policies promoting growth. Just throwing money at the public sector is not growth - just ask the communities that are, necessarily, having this unsustainable life support taken away from them. Quote:
http://www.indexmundi.com/sweden/unemployment_rate.html Not immune despite not having much of a financial services sector, and it should be noted Sweden have been rolling back the size of their state. Also noteworthy is that Sweden have been paying down their deficit for quite some time and are very happy about it. How odd given that running deficits is apparently business as usual. Australia also did much the same thing, a huge austerity package relative to ours, however they actually paid off their public sector debt, in full, and had funds in the bank to throw at it. We entered in a totally different situation, even without stimulus spending the structural deficit was unsustainable. Quote:
Interestingly Germany is already engaged in austerity measures. http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2010/06/...erity-package/ Quote:
They seem to be doing ok despite the impending austerity bite. http://online.wsj.com/article/BT-CO-...12-705004.html Quote:
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I agree that incompetence is there though, to appease Liberal Democrats many pro-growth policies traditionally associated with the Tories aren't happening. :( ---------- Post added at 11:26 ---------- Previous post was at 11:23 ---------- Quote:
Secondly the more I have the more I will spend, the more I spend the more money flows, the more money flows the better off everyone is. Your constant discussion about how I will automatically use all of this for saving holds no value at this time due to low interest rates and high inflation. Tax cuts stimulate production and stimulate economies - that's why VAT was dropped - higher production and healthier economies means all levels of income end up better off. |
Re: 'Shock' Contraction in the UK economy
ignition whats wrong with increasing income tax to fix the defecit? instead of consumption taxation and public cuts.
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Re: 'Shock' Contraction in the UK economy
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laffer_curve To close the deficit without cuts would require an... unpleasant increase in income tax. I am not convinced that taxing people for working is the best way to power the economy, it's a great way to get more people on welfare though as working, across many different income levels, becomes less viable. What's wrong with taking the state back to historical trend levels Chrysalis? Will the country fall into disarray if we go back to only spending 40% of our entire national wealth on services? Were we in some post-apocalyptic wasteland back in 2005-2006 when this was the spend? |
Re: 'Shock' Contraction in the UK economy
incentive will always be there, the incentive been in that you pay for your own food and whatever you been taxed at the income beats the dole and been on the street.
Historical trends have a higher income tax ignition ;) 90% top rate? |
Re: 'Shock' Contraction in the UK economy
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http://www.hmrc.gov.uk/stats/tax_str...1974to1990.pdf The incentive isn't always going to be there, for many of the working poor the financial case for working is precarious enough already without taking more of their income. With increased mobility of labour it wouldn't take a huge tax increase to push large numbers of people abroad. |
Re: 'Shock' Contraction in the UK economy
well I also mean to reduce consumption taxes, which generally will make the lower paid better off.
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Re: 'Shock' Contraction in the UK economy
More bad news for the coalition...
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-12306336 Quote:
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Re: 'Shock' Contraction in the UK economy
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/10604117
all this talk of the tories been economy genuises yet check the bottom graph, compare the unemployment to the 2 tory recessions. |
Re: 'Shock' Contraction in the UK economy
The economy is structurally different now than it was in either of the previous two, especially the first - thanks largely to painful but necessary Tory reforms that have largely prevented the inevitable Labour bust from being quite so severe this time round.
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Re: 'Shock' Contraction in the UK economy
I'm reserving judgement until next quarter, but it's not looking good for the ConDems.
I hope they have a plan B. |
Re: 'Shock' Contraction in the UK economy
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---------- Post added at 22:12 ---------- Previous post was at 22:07 ---------- Quote:
The socialists dropped us in it blah blah blah. 1. First of all it was the BANKERS who really dropped us in this mess and how many bankers do you know who are socialists? Yes, I will concede that Labour govts failed to get to grips with that reprehensible City culture but it was Thatcher and the Tories who invited Financial Services to this country (at the expense of industry) and introduced rampant deregulation that allowed a lot of clever, rich bankers to make even more money off the backs of decent hard working people. ---------- Post added at 22:14 ---------- Previous post was at 22:12 ---------- Quote:
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Re: 'Shock' Contraction in the UK economy
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Incidentally services produce revenue, revenue means government gets some money in taxes on that revenue. That's what I was referring to by 'productive'. Quote:
Private debt was the root cause of these issues. We were the ones doing the borrowing, the banks borrowed to service our borrowing requirements, not for their own entertainment. Those mortgage backed securities fundamentally were backed by the (bad) mortgages of real people. That same debt bubble that powered the economy to such an extent burst. Either the banks were bailed out or they went under taking depositors' funds with them. I would have leaned towards the second option but that's me ;) It is interesting to note that no-one is commenting on how much government revenue came from those bankers, and indeed how much is coming from them again. Easy scapegoat, morally questionable in their own right and partly to blame, little interest in defending themselves, easy to throw the whole blame at them. They did what most of us would in their position, and wouldn't have done it if the demand hadn't been there. Quote:
If there is an election it's because the Tories want it. There is no way the LDs will be wanting one right now, it would be simply suicidal. The economy was structurally broken, austerity had to happen if for nothing else so that we could afford Labour's PFI bills. How they managed to raise taxes and run deficits during a boom while hiding all that future liability off the books is a mystery to me, they must have been really spending, that Stephanomics graph is just the on the books stuff. :mad: |
Re: 'Shock' Contraction in the UK economy
Ignitition I will try and give you a real world analysis of how I see things.
If I see an extra £10 a month in my wages from a tax cut, its unlikely to change my spending habits, and its unlikely to make me feel confident about the economy. Obviously high end wage earners would see a bigger difference in tax cuts but they would simply save it instead of spend it, in that respect it is not taking money out of the economy it is enforcing it in circulation (which you agreed with earlier). Someone stashing money in a bank account is not keeping it in the economy, especially when its off shore. So lets take someone on 17k a year with say a 10k tax allowance, so taxed 20% on the 7k. £1400 tax a year, paid weekly so £26.92 tax a week on income tax before tax credits. a tax cut of 1% on income tax would drop it to £25.57 tax. Now give me a honest answer please. Which is going to make someone feel more confident in the economy so they more willingly spend. A tax saving of £1.35 a week or the government maintaining spending in public services. As such avoiding announcements about half a million job losses, cuts everywhere, and local firms going bust due to loss of contracts. The only logical reason I can come to that you pushing for 'more' tax cuts is you on a decent salary and you personally would gain a modest amount. Taxation generally forces money to circulate, it is not the opposite way round. As I said before the fact people moan about paying taxes is proof that they would not willingly spend the money otherwise. A contracting economy in the long run would probably make you lose more because whatever wage increases you would like would become less likely if your company is struggling. Countries that have higher standards of living generally have higher income taxes as well. The long term reason we are struggling more than france and germany, is we simply stop producing goods, which of course damages exports and GDP, the bottom line of a economy, a service economy is purely based on national confidence. The damage on that side of things was started by thatcher, however I dont put all the blame on her, blair and brown could have reversed her policies but chose not to. Also I am not dead set against cuts, but any cuts should be done reasonably eg. 1-2% a year, not draconian 80billion annual cuts. These cuts dont feel thought through, they seem to be done to appease a certian part of the population. We are entering a double dip and negative growth is almost a garuantuee for the next quarter. The bright side is if you lose your job you will be paying less taxes. |
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