Soldato
- Joined
- 3 Jun 2005
- Posts
- 5,365
- Location
- West Sussex
edit: double post
I think you're confusing justifiable with unsustainable. When benefits increase faster than the salaries from which tax is drawn to fund them there is a serious issue.
I do not support the cap, I think it's a stupid idea, the benefits that people that need them are getting aren't enough already.
Public sector wages are not a fair reflection on benefits given that public sector wages are astronomically high in comparison to private.
I personally believe that there should be a method of means-testing everyone. The cost of living should be calculated on a regional basis and those that are in most need given what they require, those that are not in need (ie those in receipt of benefits they are entitled to but actually do not need the benefits - such as wealthy OAPs that collect a state pension and winter fuel allowance and other generic payments that they don't need) do not receive the payments.
It would be a huge overhaul of the current system, but it is needed.
single parents pulling in well in excess of £1500/month through benefits, a figure they would never be able to attain through work, because they are not the sharpest tool in the box.
1. What line of work.But then you run into the same old issue of, people becoming dependant on benefits, if there is little to incentive to get a job, they wont bother at all.
In my line of work I've seen thousands of people claiming benefits that are doing just fine, single parents pulling in well in excess of £1500/month through benefits, a figure they would never be able to attain through work, because they are not the sharpest tool in the box.
It's easy to see why one would choose that option as well. Go work in a shop for 50 hours a week for £1000/month, or have a child and get £1500/month untaxed.
Yes bringing up a child is hard work and stressful, but its also a damn sight more fun than working 50 hours a week and having nothing to show for it afterwards.
I do not support the cap, I think it's a stupid idea, the benefits that people that need them are getting aren't enough already.
All of them.edit: public sector wages >> private sector doesn't sound right, what industry do you have in mind?
Public sector wages should be done on a wage by wage basis, those which ourpaced the private sector frozen then unfrozen when the private sector catches up, but those which are behind should get pay rises & those who are significantly above should get pay cuts.
That would be a more reasonable approach to it.
For private sector the government has no control, but wage freezes in the public sector will directly impact economic growth, as shock horror - the money paid out in wages also happens to be the money that get's spent in the local economy.
I find it hilarious that you see the CEO's justifying pay cuts/freezes for the staff while simultaneously using reduced demand as a reason for it - blissfully ignorant of the basic economics involved.
Actual benefits (when no fraud is involved, in most cases) is already a pittance & I don't think it's worth the money saved - as if you put another 500,000 on the poverty line you will increase crime/poor health/social disruption & mental illness for this group which is likely to cost more in the long-run.
If we want to grow economically then strangulating the spending power of the population then freezing pay (via benefits or in the public or private sector) is a stupid thing to do.
I guess that's what happens when you have somebody in charge of the UK economy who has had no formal education in economics.
If you wanted further clarification I'm happy to provide it.Wow, did you learn your economics from the 1970s union handbook on wage negotiation?
Saying that frozen wages is impacting growth is whilst technically true a very short termist approach.
So in reverse if we gave everyone a 100% pay rise we would suddenly get massive economic growth! Superb the solution to the global problems are solved.
Oh wait 5 years on and the problems even worse in the UK but better elsewhere? Oh that would be the massive economic impact of pricing ourselves out of the global markets and the massive job cuts that were the direct consequence.
Economic growth based on spending means diddly, it really does. Its underlying value adding growth we need to see, just spending more money is false growth since the vast majority of any benefit will be seen elsewhere e.g. China where jobs will be created making the tat thats boosted our "growth".
To counter this specifically.So in reverse if we gave everyone a 100% pay rise we would suddenly get massive economic growth! Superb the solution to the global problems are solved.
No. You give a pay rise to those who need it & a cut to those who don't - it's a zero sum equation.
Wasn't it Vodafone that owes something close to the sum saved by doing this? Seems to me they should be the ones to target, not the poor... (milking a turnip and all that)
They owed 1.2 billion as of 2010, they've paid no tax at all from then to now.
You may have heard of UK Uncut? They’re certainly good at attracting attention: forcing their way into Barclay’s bank the other week and
managing to close a branch of TopShop temporarily.
But what they have in noise they lack in substance. New research by the Institute of Economic
Affairs exposes how the ‘grassroots movement’ want Vodafone to pay tax in the UK on the profits it makes in Germany. It’s a reasonable principle – taxing companies
based on where they are domiciled is fine. But they also want Boots, a Swiss company, to pay tax in the UK on the profits it makes selling items to Britons, from British shops. You can have one
principle or the other, but not both – not unless we want businesses to locate elsewhere. In fact, corporation tax systems are carefully designed with reciprocal agreements between countries
for the very purpose of ensuring that profits are taxed once and not twice.
snip
I see people scraping by already, before any increase. A 1% increase is better than no increase, but the increase inline with inflation would seem fairer. If only bills increased 1% each year!
Should be frozen, if not the next best thing is a cap. I've never had a near or above inflation pay rise in 6 years, so why should people not working be afforded that luxury? I've stopped spending as much on unnecessary items as a consequence, and so should they not have to do that too?, sense of "entitlement", it stinks in this country, everyone thinks they're entitled to anything they want with minimal effort. Yes I know there are people who "can't" work, blah, blah, people who won't work, people who've only just lost their job,, then there's the 3rd generation oxygen thieves who should just be culled, but there's not much can be done, no cuts doesn't punish anyone, so obviously cuts will punish some more than others, but that's something I'm willing to accept because I don't think getting rises above inflation for benefits is the correct thing.
Any increase below inflation is effectively a decrease.