RobinBHM
Established Member
2019-2024 Tory govt put £80b of tax raises in place.As has always been said - Dogs bark, Cats meow and Labour increases taxes
How does that fit with your trope
2019-2024 Tory govt put £80b of tax raises in place.As has always been said - Dogs bark, Cats meow and Labour increases taxes
It's much more efficient and cost effective than e.g. USA public health services.You have probably highlighted the problem, it is run as a service with very little thought on being efficient or cost effective.
Needs higher investment in training/education and higher wages particularly at the low end. Also needs much greater spending on aftercare of various types, where privatisation has really bitten hard and worsened services... The NHS needs to be reformed, then you might find it easier to recruit and retain staff.
Not everyone, only those who have not packed up shop and left for some other country like Portugal. If you hit a business with higher cost then how can anyone expect them not to pass on some of those cost to the customer, if taking on staff is more expensive then you don't recruit, if your margins are tight then you cut staff or invest in automation to replace staff and do not give any payrises to become more cost effective. The only thing that will happen for some businesses that are struggling is to streamline to survive, you are already hearing of companies consolidating business units into fewer and expecting the same output with fewer staff. Yes the statement that a working man will pay no more in income tax or NI is true, in fact for some they will pay nothing because they will lose their job.Just read the OBS report on the budget, everyone will be worse off with this budget
Well, having a wife who was one the top people in the NHS I suppose the reason why the NHS spent a small fortune on external consultants and looking for help from the American medical institutions to try and make efficiency changes to match the effectiveness of their hospitals is validation of your perception. Or perhaps not!The NHS is not a business, it's a non-profit making public service. If on the other hand a monetary value was to be put on public health the NHS could only be seen as astronomically profitable and worth every penny.
This is the fundamental weakness of the naive neoliberal economic theories - that things they can't put a price on have no value.
Basically needs money, for all the usual reasons.
Dunno haven't they been trying for years and wasting money on failed IT projects? https://www.panorama-consulting.com/nhs-it-system-failure/
It's too easy to dream up panaceas, but in fact the NHS works pretty well and far better than many e.g. USA public health system. Suffered from under investment under the tories of course, but all the moaning about failure and inefficiency is just wishful thinking from the right. It's not true.
Just read the OBS report on the budget, everyone will be worse off with this budget, the economy will shrink over the next five years, real wages will reduce. Spending power will decline. Yep, a real budget for the working man. The main hit is going to be in the working and lower middle classes. If that’s Woke fiscal policy, well I’m so glad I would feel it an insult to be called woke.
NHS should have been 100% state run without concessions to the private sector. Yes and Americans are attempting to screw profits from the NHS and in the process can only reduce quality down to USA levels, but increase costs/profits.Well, having a wife who was one the top people in the NHS I suppose the reason why the NHS spent a small fortune on external consultants and looking for help from the American medical institutions to try and make efficiency changes to match the effectiveness of their hospitals is validation of your perception. Or perhaps not!
What, paying management more would make it more efficient? I thought this had been tried?The biggest issue affecting the NHS has been and continues to be government meddling, every couple of years the targets, direction, requirements kept changing. Bureaucracy is stifling, box ticking has become the way of life. Nothing like have a health minister who knows sod all about running a sweet shop never mind the largest company in the UK to make a complete mess of things. Thats any party they all have absolutely no clue. There are only probably a handful of full of people in the UK capable of running the NHS, and since the salary’s don’t match what they get in industry, we end up with the bureaucratic ineffective inefficient lumbering public service we all have to endure.
You don't have to read it, you can just scroll by.And you couldn't put budget in the title so we don't have to waste our time reading this rubbish.
It's fait accompli. You can't do anything about it.
NHS compares well against the leading health services like France Germany, Italy.You have probably highlighted the problem, it is run as a service with very little thought on being efficient or cost effective
That might be true of British Leyland and similar.This was an issue for many nationlised industries back in the day where they consumed vast amounts of money to deliver
Thanks your right, OBR not OBS. Again your also correct that they forecast that the economy will stay at the same size. Now, we know inflation will move forward which they forecast, so for the economy not to shrink in real terms in must keep pace with inflation. So I agree, technically your correct, but in reality we will be in a situation where everything costs more and we have the same money with which to buy it which means we will be worse off. That’s just putting it into the simplest terms.Not sure who the OBS are but here’s the quote from the OBR report on growth …
“Having stagnated last year, the economy is expected to grow by just over 1 per cent this year, rising to 2 per cent in 2025, before falling to around 1½ per cent, slightly below its estimated potential growth rate of 1⅔ per cent, over the remainder of the forecast. Budget policies temporarily boost output in the near term, but leave GDP largely unchanged in five years.”
Let’s be accurate - they do not predict the economy will shrink.
To be honest I don't know enough about finances to know all the pro's and con's, and I'm only using your post as an example of numbers.It will be Interesting to see what happens in the NHS. A massive number of consultants and senior staff when the pension fund limit was dropped to (I think £1.25 million)
Well yes we have been lulled into accepting these extremes of wealth distribution, but the weird thing is how many are happy to defend it even when they themselves are seriously disadvantaged.To be honest I don't know enough about finances to know all the pro's and con's, and I'm only using your post as an example of numbers.
So the statement I see often is the rich are too rich and the poor are too poor (I'm not suggesting you said this), which in many instances I agree with. But using your example of a consultant having £1.25million in a pension, surely they are part of the rich with too much money.
I don't know how you change this without the problem that you highlighted i.e. that they just retire early, but I certainly don't have pity for someone with £1.25million in their pension being hit slightly more on tax.
There are lots of posts on here mentioning how businesses will have to close or reduce in size to save costs, but isn't the entire point that people at the bottom are paid more and the people at the top should reduce their salaries. I looked at a building companies finances recently and the directors were all on £500K+ with the top people on £1m. Yet these are the people who will lament about having to reduce their workforce because the company can't afford it. Perhaps if they didn't take 10x or more of the lowest salaries then maybe they wouldn't have to.
I worked in a secondary school and the head teacher and deputy was on £150k and £100K respectively! I was Senior IT tech on £23k (in 2020). I was scrabbling around repairing computers with old parts and the like. If they both dropped £10k off their salary the school could have bought new computers for the entire school. How terrible they would have to be on £140k and £90k salaries...
do you think that these tax free incentives are only for the investors benefit, if so you cant see past the end of your noseWTF are you on about, it's not 'stolen'.
Let's be clear; When you put money into a pension scheme you get tax relief, firstly on the input payments and on interest earned throughout it's life.
At retirement you can get 25% of the total accrued back tax free. Is that fair ?
You can then either buy an annuity to provide income or leave it to take as required as drawdown. That's taxable income.
Until this budget, if there's a surplus on your death it becomes part of your estate that's tax free, is that fair ?
From now on that might be subject to inheritance tax dependant on the size of your estate.
The change is just a way to get (very rich) people to stop using pension pots as tax avoidance tools. Use them for retirement income, which is what they're meant to be, and nothing changes.
I can't see how genuine freelancers can be hit by anything in this budget.Just to build on this - don't forget for the hundreds of thousands of "ordinary workers" who are freelancers hit by IR35, this is something that will go straight out of their payslips.
You have probably highlighted the problem, it is run as a service with very little thought on being efficient or cost effective. This was an issue for many nationlised industries back in the day where they consumed vast amounts of money to deliver because people just thought the cash was infinite. The NHS needs to be reformed, then you might find it easier to recruit and retain staff.
Those are "real GBP" forecasts (i.e. already inflation adjusted).Thanks your right, OBR not OBS. Again your also correct that they forecast that the economy will stay at the same size. Now, we know inflation will move forward which they forecast, so for the economy not to shrink in real terms in must keep pace with inflation. So I agree, technically your correct, but in reality we will be in a situation where everything costs more and we have the same money with which to buy it which means we will be worse off. That’s just putting it into the simplest terms.
Sounds fair, the more you use the more you pay.
I’ve just read the executive report by OBR, and it doesn’t seem to say what you claim, in fact it says growth will rise from around 0 under Tories to 2% by 2025 under Labour.Just read the OBS report on the budget, everyone will be worse off with this budget, the economy will shrink over the next five years, real wages will reduce. Spending power will decline. Yep, a real budget for the working man. The main hit is going to be in the working and lower middle classes. If that’s Woke fiscal policy, well I’m so glad I would feel it an insult to be called woke.
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