Caporegime
- Joined
- 1 Dec 2010
- Posts
- 53,747
- Location
- Welling, London
A Ginsters jumbo Cornish pasty shortage would be the final straw for me.
Because they wouldn't fall under IR35 if they were being hired on a temporary basis to fulfil a short-term rise in demand ('defined services').If IR35 rules have not changed , why would adding new visas change the situation ? How much difference is the pay in April and now with added tax.
There's a Straw shortage??? Is there no limit to the insanity?..A Ginsters jumbo Cornish pasty shortage would be the final straw for me.
The loudest shouters in my field was 'top revenue earners' who were not directors in consultancy firms, and therefore couldn't tap into big wealth for themselves, but equally could not be added to an organisations wage budget. Essentially "MDs for hire".I’m not use why anyone who is an employee would be unhappy about IR35 changes.
There's a Straw shortage??? Is there no limit to the insanity?..![]()
ginsters fillings are made of straw now? man their quality really has improved.....
If Greggs ran out of sausage rolls would we blame the Government?
The Government seems to take the flak for everything. How can the lack of HGV drivers be blamed on the Government, after all it is NOT a state owned industry/department like the Passport Office, DVLA etc.
If the Government had nationalised all HGV vehicles in the past maybe they could be culpable, they didn’t, so how can they be blamed?
Because the Government includes lots of Pro-Brexit MPs at present and the remoaners blame everything on Brexit.
Remoaners have been buying ads on social media since the media manufactured this fuel crisis with images of queues under the heading "Brexit isn't working"
After remaining virtually unchanged for five years, world hunger and malnutrition rose last year by around 118 million people to 768 million, with most of the increase likely due to the COVID-19 pandemic, according to a major U.N. report. read moreNothing to do with Brexit. That’s why there are queues at petrol stations in Europe. That’s why restaurants aren’t able to open in Europe. That’s why food is rotting in the fields in Europe. That’s why the supermarket shelves are empty in Europe. That’s why shops are saying they will struggle with Christmas due to employee shortages in Europe.
Oh wait…
After remaining virtually unchanged for five years, world hunger and malnutrition rose last year by around 118 million people to 768 million, with most of the increase likely due to the COVID-19 pandemic, according to a major U.N. report. read more
On internationally traded markets, world food prices were up 33.9% year-on-year in June, according to the U.N food agency's price index, which measures a basket of cereals, oilseeds, dairy products, meat and sugar. read more
There is increased diplomatic momentum to tackle hunger, malnutrition and the climate crisis this year with summits like the current one, but the challenge is huge.
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A competent government would have regulated to ensure there was not such problem.
The only blame for the HGV issues in this country is the industry itself and the way pay, conditions and treatment of drivers has degraded over the past 10-20 years.
You think government are powerless to help with work conditions?So how do you "regulate" for the actual problem causing a lack of UK HGV drivers, namely....................
For me the problem isn't a "competent" or not Government, this is simply companies having to adjust to a new reality - no more cheap European labour force = no more easy profits - so now everyone is having to pay for the correction that we're undergoing as we transition from the easy years (for companies and their profits) to the more "beneficial to the UK" years (more UK jobs & being better paid for them) but like all transitions it's painful whilst it's happening.
For me the problem isn't a "competent" or not Government, this is simply companies having to adjust to a new reality - no more cheap European labour force = no more easy profits - so now everyone is having to pay for the correction that we're undergoing as we transition from the easy years (for companies and their profits) to the more "beneficial to the UK" years (more UK jobs & being better paid for them) but like all transitions it's painful whilst it's happening.
You think government are powerless to help with work conditions?
It was a Labour government who promised the earth to a generation of people telling them that they were all too good for manual jobs and they should all go to university, get a degree, be a lawyer or a doctor.
A generation did this and now end up working as a Barista, despite having a degree in history or the arts, because actually there was not the requirements for the sheer numbers of people wanting such highly paid jobs, but because of the dream which Labour sold them, they feel it is beneath them to be a lorry driver, or a fruit picker etc.
Labour felt it OK to just pay peanuts to overseas workers for jobs which they promised a generation of Brits they wouldn't have to do.
Alas the champagne socialism dint work and now they blame the government of the day for problems which are rooted back in their mis-management of the country.