we have already sold a large portion of these shares for a heck of a lot less than 'we' bought them for.
What portion have we sold, what did we sell them for and what did we buy them for?
we have already sold a large portion of these shares for a heck of a lot less than 'we' bought them for.
[TW]Fox;20317758 said:What portion have we sold, what did we sell them for and what did we buy them for?
Not exactly. I tend to think we get more back than we put in tax-wise. I mean the amount of money I have recieved through my education and healthcare and having roads and being safe and all those other good things costs waaaaaaaaaaay more than I have done or will ever contribute thorugh taxes.
Gold for one![]()
Same thing different method. Taking shares, or creating shares involves taking value from someone else, and giving to someone else.
Same with money.
[TW]Fox;20317781 said:How is 'gold' an answer to a question asking what portion of the shareholding has been sold?![]()
I have no problems with infastructure spending. That is usually required for a
healthy private sector.
But bailing private business, has nothing to do with that.
Banks are to big, incompetent banks should fail, but they
can't.
Nah im just poking fun and holes in Browns logic, how the hell did he become chancellor...i mean he got it ALL wrong.
He bought high and sold low...![]()
Unless of course you introduce the notion that whatever you were going to do with that money (e.g. buy healthcare) the tax authority can do more efficiently due to things such as bulk purchasing and access to specialist knowledge. In which case 2+2 would equal 5.
[TW]Fox;20317800 said:The problem of course is that a bank, such as HBOS, is rather different to another private company, say a car company called Rover. When Rover failed, the customers lost warranty and the staff lost jobs.
The consequences of a bank that large failing were far, far higher for society as a whole, which is why the government supported it by purchasing shares.
[TW]Fox;20317800 said:The consequences of a bank that large failing were far, far higher for society as a whole, which is why the government supported it by purchasing shares.
[TW]Fox;20317800 said:The problem of course is that a bank, such as HBOS, is rather different to another private company, say a car company called Rover. When Rover failed, the customers lost warranty and the staff lost jobs.
The consequences of a bank that large failing were far, far higher for society as a whole, which is why the government supported it by purchasing shares.
hahah, I used to work for a small company that supplied the public sector. We added 30% on for government work. No idea on how to push down price, no real incentive.
[TW]Fox;20317706 said:I think much of the reason behind these protests is that the information age has given people both the ability to organise things and the belief that they actually understand things, irrespective of whether they actually do or not.
I wonder what proportion of those on the streets right now can explain how the bank bailout process actually worked and what the net result to the taxpayer was? Not that I'm saying everyone SHOULD know these things, but if you are going to protest about something it surely makes sense to educate yourself about it first, no? It amazes me the sheer amount of people who honestly think the banks were simply given a pot of free money for splurgle on lulz.
Not exactly. I tend to think we get more back than we put in tax-wise. I mean the amount of money I have recieved through my education and healthcare and having roads and being safe and all those other good things costs waaaaaaaaaaay more than I have done or will ever contribute thorugh taxes.
My points have always been theoretical. Not saying the Government doesn't have its flaws! They need a good slapping too.
Not exactly. I tend to think we get more back than we put in tax-wise. I mean the amount of money I have recieved through my education and healthcare and having roads and being safe and all those other good things costs waaaaaaaaaaay more than I have done or will ever contribute thorugh taxes.
If private business gets bailed out every time they fail that removes some
incentives. This is happening with banks.