RogerS
Established Member
Jacob":l2ytkfms said:..... we don't pay enough for our stuff.
We certainly don't ! The price we pay dairy farmers for their milk is totally inadequate.
Jacob":l2ytkfms said:..... we don't pay enough for our stuff.
Random Orbital Bob":2ntg1j39 said:Jacob":2ntg1j39 said:In the local construction industry (I've renovated one and built two houses), there is absolutely no question that the British trades have been out competed by eastern European workers. The Eastern Europeans work for substantially lower day rates (undercutting the Brit's) and frankly the general reports are that their work ethic/rate is harder, longer, more prepared to do lates and weekends....generally more accommodating to the builder when on a tight schedule.
So I have witnessed with my own eyes the direct impact in construction and it appears to be carpentry that's most directly affected. I don't see many European Plumbers or sparks round here.
That's the only direct impact I've noticed personally. One could therefore argue that the living standards of local natives in those jobs have been directly impacted.
Jacob":6zd8viwq said:But then the clients of these hard working efficient cheap joiners should see the EU in a positive light!Random Orbital Bob":6zd8viwq said:[.... I'm not arguing for or against the status quo in respect of polish workers, I was just responding to your assertion that the EU has only affected us positively. I think its reasonable to say that a fair few British joiners have been affected by this disjoint in wage expectation....
And we all benefit from the migrant agricultural workers - apparently a lot of stuff would be more expensive and even left to rot in the fields, if it wasn't for them. In other words - we don't pay enough for our stuff.
You can't blame higher education if the govt is not spending enough on training and vocational causes. The blame game just goes around in circles. The culprit is the government.RossJarvis":2kwm49pw said:....
The construction industry has really suffered over the past few decades as the "education industry" has diverted the more able into Higher Education (for some often bizarre and pointless reason) leaving a much lower standard of ability to enter into the construction trades. ....
Jacob":1zt21yyc said:You can't blame higher education if the govt is not spending enough on training and vocational causes. The blame game just goes around in circles. The culprit is the government.RossJarvis":1zt21yyc said:....
The construction industry has really suffered over the past few decades as the "education industry" has diverted the more able into Higher Education (for some often bizarre and pointless reason) leaving a much lower standard of ability to enter into the construction trades. ....
One of the courses I did was a TOPS course which was a condensed C&G course designed to get people back to work and had been going strong since inception following WW1. Huge range of other skills being trained up. Widely regarded as brilliant and effective - not surprising after 70 years of steady development and improvement.
They were shut down by Thatcher, for no obvious reason other than saving money.
Jacob":13ticcij said:You can't blame higher education if the govt is not spending enough on training and vocational causes. The blame game just goes around in circles. The culprit is the government.RossJarvis":13ticcij said:....
The construction industry has really suffered over the past few decades as the "education industry" has diverted the more able into Higher Education (for some often bizarre and pointless reason) leaving a much lower standard of ability to enter into the construction trades. ....
One of the courses I did was a TOPS course which was a condensed C&G course designed to get people back to work and had been going strong since inception following WW1. Huge range of other skills being trained up. Widely regarded as brilliant and effective - not surprising after 70 years of steady development and improvement.
They were shut down by Thatcher, for no obvious reason other than saving money.
Inoffthered":3gqazeby said:There is no excuse for a skills shortage in the construction industry. The CITB still impose a levy on construction businesses (collecting £182m + each year) ostensibly to promote training in the industry. This anachronism is a hang over from WW2 when the country needed people to build houses. All these years later the CITB is still taxing construction businesses.....but they do have super offices rural Norfolk and their annual directors report & accounts contain a translation into Welsh.
RossJarvis":2ssqqyj3 said:Inoffthered":2ssqqyj3 said:There is no excuse for a skills shortage in the construction industry. The CITB still impose a levy on construction businesses (collecting £182m + each year) ostensibly to promote training in the industry. This anachronism is a hang over from WW2 when the country needed people to build houses. All these years later the CITB is still taxing construction businesses.....but they do have super offices rural Norfolk and their annual directors report & accounts contain a translation into Welsh.
I'm leaning toward the idea that industry needs to take the responsibility back for training, some places are very good at it, but training budgets are often the first to go in hard times. Smaller employers are obviously going to be in a bind for this. Creating pointless "agencies" like CITB which are probably full of useless chair polishers attending endless meetings or "networking" or expecting "the government" to do it is unfortunately a recipe for disaster.
Jacob":2cy4cqxk said:Since 1979 there has been a huge misguided effort to introduce more management into many institutions, in the pursuit of efficiency. Most notoriously into the NHS which previously was regarded as a miraculously survivor of minimal management.
By and large these efforts and reorganisations were a complete waste of time and effort, except for the chair polishers, laughing their way to the bank - many of them paying themselves enormous salaries.
Jacob":1vzy0d3s said:Since 1979 there has been a huge misguided effort to introduce more management into many institutions, in the pursuit of efficiency. Most notoriously into the NHS which previously was regarded as a miraculously survivor of minimal management.
By and large these efforts and reorganisations were a complete waste of time and effort, except for the chair polishers, laughing their way to the bank - many of them paying themselves enormous salaries.
Very unlikely. It's these same people who are pushing for privatisation all the time - loadsamoney to be made!RobinBHM":z6o9bcro said:Jacob":z6o9bcro said:Since 1979 there has been a huge misguided effort to introduce more management into many institutions, in the pursuit of efficiency. Most notoriously into the NHS which previously was regarded as a miraculously survivor of minimal management.
By and large these efforts and reorganisations were a complete waste of time and effort, except for the chair polishers, laughing their way to the bank - many of them paying themselves enormous salaries.
I had a client that ran his own business earning lots of money, he has a big house here a palatial one in Portugal. His business: business consultancy, mostly to public sector and a great deal in within the NHS.
Does the NHS gain so much in efficiency that it recovers the extortionate costs that these management consultants charge?
RogerS":3gok4cm5 said:I used to be one of them - we're not all bad, y'know. Mind you, the partners #-o
When I was working for KPMG I remember doing one piece of work for an investment bank. There were two parts to the study and a report at the end of each. However, the circulation of the two reports was different and so there was the same introductory section at the front of each. I completed the first part and duly submitted the report to the partner for his approval (and of course his fees). His sole contribution? Putting a semi-colon at the end of each bullet point item in the introductory section.
'Fair enough', I thought, 'if that's the house style then so be it'. A couple of months later and the second part was completed. Again, I submitted the report for sign-off to the partner so he could claim his fees. His sole contribution ? Removing the semi-colon at the end of each bullet point item in the introductory section.
It was then that I decided I wanted out.
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