Please England, Wake the f**k up.
#1
Posted 28 July 2011 - 23:27
I can understand people are miffed about essentially a pay cut but can they not see the bigger picture? Plus all this is really doing is offsetting the rising pension scheme cost, its not like they're pocketing the extra 1.1bn to use for wine parties and to entertain bankers.
So please England, don't be fucking pussys and strike like mad like the french, understand that things have to change and that like it or not, those changes will affect you.
#2
Posted 29 July 2011 - 07:35
Ion Cannon!, on 28 July 2011 - 23:27, said:
Phix'd a little there.
What annoys me is that they act as though it's their right that they get pensions far in excess of the private sector without contributing any where near the same levels.
Public sector workers are hardly known for being effecient, productive and unbureaucratic. Man up and deal with the fact that we're all in the shit and you weren't good enough for the private sector wages in the first place.
#3
Posted 29 July 2011 - 12:42
I don't know how much I can contribute, we've had the same problem here in Denmark (Everyone demands a way to fix economy, cuts are made, people get angry, strike, revert cuts and act surprised when economy continues to be shit). But judging on the level of anger you two express, it seems to not be quite on the same level.
Edited by SquigPie, 29 July 2011 - 12:45.
Quote
Imagine a group of people who are all blind, deaf and slightly demented and suddenly someone in the crowd asks, "What are we to do?"... The only possible answer is, "Look for a cure". Until you are cured, there is nothing you can do.
And since you don't believe you are sick, there can be no cure.
- Vladimir Solovyov
#4
Posted 29 July 2011 - 13:00
What Ion and I are annoyed about is that certain "groups" in this country think that they are immune from global economic pressures because they either broke or non-market affected employment. Which is quite frankly, utter bollocks. It affects everyone, without exception and that people who have, in all fairness, guaranteed, cast-iron, gold plated pensions, should just STFU about having to pay a pathetically nominal amount more given the far wider ramifications than if they don't.
#5
Posted 29 July 2011 - 15:19
I guess I just thought teachers and doctors would know better, but it seems not even they can see the bigger picture.. Some of them then pointed to the bankers making huge bonuses again. And I can understand their ire somewhat but really, theres already the bank levy that makes several billion per year and heres the main thing. Bankers generally make money, the public sector makes jobs, but it does not make money. I think the torys could indeed be a little tougher on the bankers but they have to be careful they don't scare them away to China. Plus to simply say "Don't make us pay more money, instead introduce more bankers taxes" People seem to think everything can be solved by taxing the banks more, this is simply not true and if ANYONE, even a stupid person, put any thought into it, they would see why. Why can people not just for once use their fucking brains!
#6
Posted 30 July 2011 - 10:19
Edited by Jinzor, 30 July 2011 - 10:20.
Steam: Jinz
X-Fire: jinrenegade
#7
Posted 30 July 2011 - 13:11
#8
Posted 30 July 2011 - 21:26
We should be taxing the high heaven shit out of the super rich and the people who got us into this mess and keep us in this mess and dont do anything to get us out of this mess.
If you think those striking are the real problem then YOU need to wake the fuck up.
#9
Posted 30 July 2011 - 22:03
Pav:3d, on 30 July 2011 - 21:26, said:
We should be taxing the high heaven shit out of the super rich and the people who got us into this mess and keep us in this mess and dont do anything to get us out of this mess.
If you think those striking are the real problem then YOU need to wake the fuck up.
Sorry, but wtf are you talking about? I don't want to sound like an arrogant arsehat but I have to wonder whether your grip on the understanding of the situation is quite clear.
If you want to blame someone for getting us into this mess, blame Mr. Gordon Brown, for allowing banks total and utter free reign to do what they want (a policy he instigated btw), for spending more than he could possibly afford and for paying everyone who didn't feel like getting a job, a lot of money to sit on their arse in the pub all day. Don't pretend that 40 upper-middle class twits at Northern Rock and RBS were solely responsible for the deficit in the UK budget (they will have repaid any debt that they have to the Government, probably before you graduate). Blame the previous Chancellor of the Exchequer for spending more than he had. /discussion
#10
Posted 30 July 2011 - 23:46
Pav:3d, on 30 July 2011 - 21:26, said:
We should be taxing the high heaven shit out of the super rich and the people who got us into this mess and keep us in this mess and dont do anything to get us out of this mess.
If you think those striking are the real problem then YOU need to wake the fuck up.
So what do you propose? Taking 160bn from the private market? that would cripple the UK economy beyond reason. Everyone is going to be effected by these cuts because we have all been living beyond our means. Or at least most of us, and as a country we have gotten to used to low taxes and good services.
Pension costs have risen beyond their intended price because people live longer. It was not designed to support people for another 15-20 years. If anything this increase in contributions is merely going to somewhat offset the rising pensions cost. It will save 1.1bn this year, and 2.3bn next year. Out of the total 160bn thats still a drop in the ocean.
There is no easy fix for something like this, the torys are cutting hard but frankly, they have to. I don't completely agree with some aspects mind. I think their deficit reduction should have both tax increases and spending cuts, instead they are leaning much more towards the cuts, but thats understandable as people are completely irrational when a tax rise is even suggested.
#11
Posted 31 July 2011 - 06:06
We should have kick started a high tech, high quality manufacturing industry concentrating on clean energy. Give it tax breaks and encourage people to get basic things like double glazing and loft insulation. People are spending a fortune on energy bills, you make the homes more efficient then they have more money to spend which in turn stimulates the economy. Money doesn't generate wealth by existing, it generates wealth by moving around from x to y to z.
Also take this further and we could have started on the road to energy independence. Think how much we'd save not being over a barrel (pun intended) to Russia or OPEC. Then you can sell on the techs to others too.
In summation, cuts were needed but they were executed so badly that strikes are the result.
#12
Posted 31 July 2011 - 11:04
I do have to say though I think the university cuts was the worst place imaginable to cut. I mean afterall the people who go to university are the people who are going to make the money in generations to come. I believe the university sector needed a restructure, but this wasn't it. I am a litle bias though, being a student
#13
Posted 01 August 2011 - 07:36
Dauth, on 31 July 2011 - 06:06, said:
This is a good idea. It would've been entirely possible to have offered tax incentives to alternative energy companies, but, and I am playing devil's adovcate here, cutting taxes for this would not have magically turned the economy around. Plus there are already several enegy effeciency drives that make insulating your home almost free (it's just that the government don't advertise them).
The issue, I believe, is that we waste money on lots of social services. The NHS, for example, is a bloated and ineffecient rotting cash cow. Also, the public sector pension scheme is horribly draining on the countries resources (not just the UK, the US as well). It would serve the government better to increase basic pay by 1/3rd across the board and allow people to make pensions private. Freeze the pension system for workers as it stands and then look at how the deficit balances itself out in the next 5-10 years.
Edited by Wizard, 01 August 2011 - 07:36.
#14
Posted 01 August 2011 - 09:36
#15
Posted 01 August 2011 - 09:48
In short:
If you are out of work (and supposedly seeking a job), you are paid by the government.
If you are unable to work due to disability or illness, you are paid by the government.
If you are in excess of retirement age, you are paid by the government (State Pension, all those who have paid NI for 30 years or more are entitled to this)
All parents of children under 18, are given money by the governement (shortly this will be reduced based upon gross combined family income, iirc).
All those who work, pay National Insurance contributions and Income Tax (PAYE employes pay considerably more NI than self-employed or non-PAYE employees, and employers also pay NI contributions). Afaik, NI is supposed to be specifically in respect of your state pension. The rest of your tax pays for everything else, NHS etc.
Edited by Wizard, 01 August 2011 - 09:52.
#16
Posted 01 August 2011 - 18:30
The biggest shit hit the fan for us when we switched most of our social security systems, job security laws and the like to "market friendly" versions. Sure unemployment rates dropped sharply, but most of the "new" jobs are literally too shitty to afford a living. Health care is plagued with a myriad of competing systems and at the basics it's better not to go to a doctor at all unless you've lost a leg and two arms. Most of those cuts and changes sure have lowered costs, but simply by breaking down the system to the point where costs are saved through being barely worthwhile for their intended purpose.
Anyways, to get slightly back on topic, as far as I can tell the issue of most British social/public systems is not so much too high investments but rather mismanagement and inefficiency (which results in high costs as resources aren't used properly). Of course cutting down investments and raising taxes slightly lessens the symptoms but it doesn't actually address the true problems. Especially seeing how mismanagement and inefficiency pretty much caused the whole mess in the first place, the average person has only little motivation to literally pay for someone's else's failures.
It would be much more efficient as well as better communicable to first get your systems up to speed, then evaluate (instead of just cutting seemingly at random) the most efficient level and lastly make cuts/rises to achieve this level.
#17
Posted 02 August 2011 - 11:36
On the issue of wastage on the British social/public systems, then yes, thats what always gets touted, efficiency savings ect or you hear about the ridiculous projects labour or the tories have made, but that still only accounts for a small % of the total bill. But really I think you can only cut so much inefficiency, I believe the term efficiency savings is used as a "buzz word" to make the public believe that the entire deficit is due to such a thing, but I really doubt that is the case.
The main problem is just that people have gotten used to living beyond their means, people want it all but are not prepared to pay for it. Yes there is wastage, I think there is in anything when the size of the thing being run is an entire country, but to actually reduce the deficit to a much lower level will mean either A)Cutting services or B)Tax Rises. A combination of both is probably best.
#18
Posted 02 August 2011 - 11:49
Golan, on 01 August 2011 - 18:30, said:
Another reason is that I have to accept that for at least 50% of my life there will be people in government who do not share my personal beliefs, and many more who I do not consider competent enough to shape to play dough.
Golan, on 01 August 2011 - 18:30, said:
Golan, on 01 August 2011 - 18:30, said:
It would be much more efficient as well as better communicable to first get your systems up to speed, then evaluate (instead of just cutting seemingly at random) the most efficient level and lastly make cuts/rises to achieve this level.
#19
Posted 02 August 2011 - 18:36
Ion Cannon!, on 02 August 2011 - 11:36, said:
Just as the "buzz word" of (in)efficiency isn't the entire cause of the problems, high wages/costs aren't either. However, efficiency affects costs as well (while it is barely the other way round) so you should focus on efficiency first.
Wizard, on 02 August 2011 - 11:49, said:
Wizard, on 02 August 2011 - 11:49, said:
Wizard, on 02 August 2011 - 11:49, said:
Wizard, on 02 August 2011 - 11:49, said:
Free market mismanagement is drastically different from social security mismanagement and so applying the rules of one to weed out the other is bound to fail one way or another. The entire point of all the social security systems is to (temporarily) cushion the fall of those that have failed or are in an inefficient position. Free market thinking is the entire opposite - you don't make money by insuring failures, you make money by insuring those that have a reasonable chance of success. However, this isn't the point of social security systems. Social security systems only work because the entire society works together to lessen the strain on the weaker parts of society.
So, social security systems are by construction unfit for competitive market management - the large scale "inefficiency" is the goal of the system as society as a whole can function more efficiently when the effects of outliers are lessened. Competitive market management, which could get rid of small scale mismanagements, would however require cutting the the whole of society into smaller pieces to allow competition - this however clashes with the initial idea, as the most effective is the one that completely weeds out the negative outliers, which isn't the point of the system.
Edited by Golan, 02 August 2011 - 19:28.
#20
Posted 03 August 2011 - 15:26
Golan, on 02 August 2011 - 18:36, said:
Wizard, on 02 August 2011 - 11:49, said:
I don't take issue with additional economically driven medical care, having been a beneficiary of it when I was much younger. I just believe that a person, no matter how lazy, is entitled to it.
Golan, on 02 August 2011 - 18:36, said:
Wizard, on 02 August 2011 - 11:49, said:
Golan, on 02 August 2011 - 18:36, said:
Wizard, on 02 August 2011 - 11:49, said:
Golan, on 02 August 2011 - 18:36, said:
Golan, on 02 August 2011 - 18:36, said:
Golan, on 02 August 2011 - 18:36, said:
#21
Posted 03 August 2011 - 17:36
Wizard, on 03 August 2011 - 15:26, said:
I don't take issue with additional economically driven medical care, having been a beneficiary of it when I was much younger. I just believe that a person, no matter how lazy, is entitled to it.
Wizard, on 03 August 2011 - 15:26, said:
Wizard, on 03 August 2011 - 15:26, said:
Wizard, on 03 August 2011 - 15:26, said:
Wizard, on 03 August 2011 - 15:26, said:
Wizard, on 03 August 2011 - 15:26, said:
Strictly defined pensions are simply a way to keep things organized enough to keep the burden off of "true" social security systems. In the end, pensions too suffer from factors discriminating against underprivileged people, so the government would have to take care of those falling through the cracks anyways - only if the system is privatized, they have no one but those people, resulting in an even higher debt as those capable of properly paying their fees no longer do so.
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