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cryrst The garden of England 26 Oct 22 7.09am | |
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So basically instead of tax cuts and investment it is now going to be tax rises and cuts on state spending. All the people wanting the former are now not getting it and the ones wanting the latter will get what they fought so hard for . Happy?
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Henry of Peckham Eton Mess 26 Oct 22 7.48am | |
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Originally posted by cryrst
So basically instead of tax cuts and investment it is now going to be tax rises and cuts on state spending. All the people wanting the former are now not getting it and the ones wanting the latter will get what they fought so hard for . Happy? There were always going to be massive cuts in public spending ... In Liz we Truss and Crazy Karteng just made the situation worse because they upped the cost of public borrowing. If you borrow you have to pay it back and if the cost of borrowing goes up obviously it takes longer to repay. The primary way to raise Exchequer money to pay back national debt is to do it through taxation (hence the temporary NI increase). Add to everything else, pandemic debt, international interest rate rises and uncontrollable price increases because of Putin then your timing for unfunded tax cuts has to be considered. It wasn't and our inexperienced politicians and prospects for the UK economy were pounced on by the wolves. Boris was a lying, self interested Oaf and Liz Truss was useless. Step up Rishi. Whoever runs the country has huge problems to resolve and the public will have to bear some pain. The vulnerable should not have to bear it disproportionately but the government needs to act quickly. The Exchequer could save a huge amount of money by ignoring the triple lock on pensions. Maybe by halving the state pension increase next year but that would have profound implications for those who rely upon their pension as their sole source of income at a time when the price of basic essentials is going through the roof. Good luck Rishi. Edited by Henry of Peckham (26 Oct 2022 8.24am)
Denial is not just a river in Egypt |
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Badger11 Beckenham 26 Oct 22 8.03am | |
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Originally posted by cryrst
So basically instead of tax cuts and investment it is now going to be tax rises and cuts on state spending. All the people wanting the former are now not getting it and the ones wanting the latter will get what they fought so hard for . Happy? No they wont be because the people who complained about the Tories giving the pubic free money will now complain that the Tories aren't giving people free money, err.
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Wisbech Eagle Truro Cornwall 26 Oct 22 8.24am | |
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Originally posted by cryrst
So basically instead of tax cuts and investment it is now going to be tax rises and cuts on state spending. All the people wanting the former are now not getting it and the ones wanting the latter will get what they fought so hard for . Happy? No. Basically instead of unfunded ideology we have been forced to recognise economic reality. Everyone would like "tax cuts and investment" but you cannot pull them out of thin air. Magic money trees don't exist to plug the gaps left when taxes are cut and investments neither happen overnight, nor are made very quickly when the world is facing recession and we also are already struggling with labour shortages caused, at least in part, by Brexit. Truss's plans were beyond stupid. They were dangerously irresponsible and have made a bad situation worse. They produced a run on the £, market instability, higher interest rates and inflationary pressures. Any benefit from tax cuts would have been more than wiped out by increased costs. Why on earth would anyone be happy about that? Having to rescue the country from stupidity is shameful, but necessary. No-one will enjoy what the next few months, and years, will bring but there's just no alternative. We can argue about the detail but the bottom line is that everyone will face higher taxation and reduced services. My own view is that as many of our services are already stretched to capacity the opportunity to cut them is quite limited. So I expect the emphasis to be on taxation. I expect a windfall tax on the energy companies. Rather than a cut in income tax I anticipate it increasing and the levels at which the higher bands kick in decreasing. VAT may well increase too. This may all be done in stages to avoid too big a shock to the economy at any one time. Who-ever was in power would have faced huge problems but having blustering Johnson, and then ideological Truss, as Tory PMs has made things worse and, worse of all, lost the Tory party their reputation for integrity and financial competence, and probably delivered us into the hands of a disjointed, ill prepared and uninspiring opposition.
For the avoidance of doubt any comments in response to a previous post are directed to its ideas and not at any, or all, posters personally. |
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Nicholas91 The Democratic Republic of Kent 26 Oct 22 8.41am | |
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Originally posted by Wisbech Eagle
No. Basically instead of unfunded ideology we have been forced to recognise economic reality. Everyone would like "tax cuts and investment" but you cannot pull them out of thin air. Magic money trees don't exist to plug the gaps left when taxes are cut and investments neither happen overnight, nor are made very quickly when the world is facing recession and we also are already struggling with labour shortages caused, at least in part, by Brexit. Truss's plans were beyond stupid. They were dangerously irresponsible and have made a bad situation worse. They produced a run on the £, market instability, higher interest rates and inflationary pressures. Any benefit from tax cuts would have been more than wiped out by increased costs. Why on earth would anyone be happy about that? Having to rescue the country from stupidity is shameful, but necessary. No-one will enjoy what the next few months, and years, will bring but there's just no alternative. We can argue about the detail but the bottom line is that everyone will face higher taxation and reduced services. My own view is that as many of our services are already stretched to capacity the opportunity to cut them is quite limited. So I expect the emphasis to be on taxation. I expect a windfall tax on the energy companies. Rather than a cut in income tax I anticipate it increasing and the levels at which the higher bands kick in decreasing. VAT may well increase too. This may all be done in stages to avoid too big a shock to the economy at any one time. Who-ever was in power would have faced huge problems but having blustering Johnson, and then ideological Truss, as Tory PMs has made things worse and, worse of all, lost the Tory party their reputation for integrity and financial competence, and probably delivered us into the hands of a disjointed, ill prepared and uninspiring opposition. Almost precisely my interpretation of it. Like most people I would rather have a realistic grip on the challenges I and the country will face as opposed to either being lied to, misled or presented with an illusion that everything is OK. I'd also like to hold out for hope in the future based on something more tangible and believable. I'd also strongly prefer somebody in power who articulates some semblance and understanding of reality than an inanely grinning moron. It may not be pretty for the foreseeable future but with COVID, Russia/Ukraine and other things what do people expect? There is no miracle strategy to immediately fix everything but at least now there's looking like there might be a reasonable plan to start with.
Now Zaha's got a bit of green grass ahead of him here... and finds Ambrose... not a bad effort!!!! |
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cryrst The garden of England 26 Oct 22 8.52am | |
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Originally posted by Wisbech Eagle
No. Basically instead of unfunded ideology we have been forced to recognise economic reality. Everyone would like "tax cuts and investment" but you cannot pull them out of thin air. Magic money trees don't exist to plug the gaps left when taxes are cut and investments neither happen overnight, nor are made very quickly when the world is facing recession and we also are already struggling with labour shortages caused, at least in part, by Brexit. Truss's plans were beyond stupid. They were dangerously irresponsible and have made a bad situation worse. They produced a run on the £, market instability, higher interest rates and inflationary pressures. Any benefit from tax cuts would have been more than wiped out by increased costs. Why on earth would anyone be happy about that? Having to rescue the country from stupidity is shameful, but necessary. No-one will enjoy what the next few months, and years, will bring but there's just no alternative. We can argue about the detail but the bottom line is that everyone will face higher taxation and reduced services. My own view is that as many of our services are already stretched to capacity the opportunity to cut them is quite limited. So I expect the emphasis to be on taxation. I expect a windfall tax on the energy companies. Rather than a cut in income tax I anticipate it increasing and the levels at which the higher bands kick in decreasing. VAT may well increase too. This may all be done in stages to avoid too big a shock to the economy at any one time. Who-ever was in power would have faced huge problems but having blustering Johnson, and then ideological Truss, as Tory PMs has made things worse and, worse of all, lost the Tory party their reputation for integrity and financial competence, and probably delivered us into the hands of a disjointed, ill prepared and uninspiring opposition. Economic reality is where we are and I agree.
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mezzer Main Stand, Block F, Row 20 seat 1... 26 Oct 22 9.55am | |
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Originally posted by Badger11
No they wont be because the people who complained about the Tories giving the pubic free money will now complain that the Tories aren't giving people free money, err. I think I missed that particular policy.
Living down here does have some advantages. At least you can see them cry. |
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HKOwen Hong Kong 26 Oct 22 10.15am | |
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I have heard " efficiencies and waste cutting for decades, no Govt ever seems to grasp the nettle.
Responsibility Deficit Disorder is a medical condition. Symptoms include inability to be corrected when wrong, false sense of superiority, desire to share personal info no else cares about, general hubris. It's a medical issue rather than pure arrogance. |
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steeleye20 Croydon 26 Oct 22 11.43am | |
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What do they imagine there is left to cut? After 12 years of tory austerity and chaos our public services are in dire straits and we have poverty and hungry kids. An election would only be a start to a long journey back imo.
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Rudi Hedman Caterham 26 Oct 22 12.53pm | |
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Originally posted by steeleye20
What do they imagine there is left to cut? After 12 years of tory austerity and chaos our public services are in dire straits and we have poverty and hungry kids. An election would only be a start to a long journey back imo. I think they should give no police force a go. We’re almost there anyway. No need for BLM defunding the police. We’ll do it so we can all have another takeaway.
COYP |
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Badger11 Beckenham 26 Oct 22 1.55pm | |
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Originally posted by HKOwen
I have heard " efficiencies and waste cutting for decades, no Govt ever seems to grasp the nettle. It's because they are scared to make real cuts. They could have cancelled Trident / HS2 / Foreign aid. They could slash some of the departments by just abolishing stuff instead all they do is tinker around the edges.
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Stirlingsays 26 Oct 22 2.18pm | |
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Originally posted by mezzer
I think I missed that particular policy. It's literally the welfare state....even with public pensions on average if you live longer than seven years all those contributions are used up. Just recently Sunak forwarded government checks to people for energy bills. A lot of people were paid to sit at home on lockdowns....all that was borrowed money from the treasury....400 billion was spent over that period, more than we spent fighting WW2, and we didn't recover from that until the sixties.....most people just nodded along and weren't told the extent of impact to the already massively damaged system.....a system that was done for in 2008 but had been racking up massive debt since the nineties. Edited by Stirlingsays (26 Oct 2022 2.22pm)
'Who are you and how did you get in here? I'm a locksmith. And, I'm a locksmith.' (Leslie Nielsen) |
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