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Nor has the "jobs recovery" been a "wages recovery." Well done Cameron and Osborne -
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Because blaming racists, or "unpatriotic" internationalists, is so much easier than blaming yourselves -
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Half of us are borrowing to cover living costs. Since the 1980s the poorest fifth have been borrowing more and more
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Showing posts with label Austerity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Austerity. Show all posts
Wednesday, 7 June 2017
Wednesday, June 07, 2017
Posted by Hari
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Labels: Austerity, budget cuts, education, housing, inequality, NHS, police, property, taxation
Tuesday, 16 May 2017
Tuesday, May 16, 2017
Posted by Hari
No comments
Labels: Austerity, budget cuts, education, elections, inequality, jobs, NHS, pay, police, public sector, Tories
Fee and KJ hazard a guess...
SOURCE PUBLIC SECTOR EXECUTIVE: Lib Dems join Labour in pledge to scrap
1% public sector pay cap
Liberal Democrat leader Tim Farron has pledged to put an end
to the government’s 1% public sector pay cap and uprate wages in line with
inflation, a commitment that is in line with Labour’s pledges according to its
leaked manifesto. Farron, who accused the Conservatives of treating health
workers “like dirt” at yesterday’s Royal College of Nursing (RCN) annual
conference, said nurses and teachers could be £780 better off by 2021 as part
of his party’s plans. Conversely, it is estimated that a new nurse would be
around £530 worse off by then under current Tory plans, while a primary school
teacher would lose out on £550 and an army sergeant £830, according to Lib Dem
analysis. The party’s leader also said that the controversial pay cap, branded
by many unions as a “cruel” policy, would leave the average civil servant £800
worse off by 2021. Vince Cable, Lib Dem shadow chancellor and the former
business secretary, said: “Public sector workers are facing a double blow at
the hands of this Conservative government, with years of pitiful increases to
pay combined with a Brexit squeeze caused by soaring inflation. “Our NHS and
schools are already struggling to recruit the staff they need. "Living
standards are falling, prices are rising and nurses are going to food banks –
but Theresa May doesn’t care.” Just last week, a leading trade union claimed
the cap policy will cost the UK economy around £16bn in lost wages by the end
of the decade. Analysis by the GMB also predicted that between 2017 and 2020,
five million workers in the public sector will find themselves out of pocket by
around £3,300 each. As expected, the cap has been an extremely controversial
policy since its inception, and is now threatening to drive the nursing
workforce to its first-ever strike in the RCN’s 100-year history.
OUR RELATED STORIES:
£100bn a year is missing from our high streets thanks to 50 years of pay squeezes. See the stats
Hoping for a Brexit U-turn? Then let's U-turn inequality. Except Hammond’s budget is making it worse
Why does everyone say inequality is falling when it's rising? Measure all wealth/assets, not just incomes
The NHS is not a “cost”. It creates nationwide jobs, technology, growth and wealth. Oh, and health
FTSE bosses take 2.5 days to earn what you earn all year. Data shows they don't deserve it
All governments agree to fix the housing crisis. Latest figures show we're still not even trying
Recovery? What recovery?! Bank of England director explains why broke Britain is still broken
Brexit was about inequality in Britain, not immigration. Have our politicians realised this?
See the Stats: Osborne's 2016 budget protected the wealthiest while the most vulnerable suffer
Inequality: the UK has 9 of the 10 poorest regions in Northern Europe. But Inner London is the richest
Graphs at a glance: With highest pay and highest job growth is London sucking the life out of Britain?
Londoners earn 15% more 'cos London is damn expensive! But the poorest 5th in London are paid only 4% more
Graphs at a glance: Britain is already a low-pay economy with falling average wages
Is your Cost of Living crisis over?! Average wages are still back where they were 10 years ago
Saturday, 13 May 2017
Saturday, May 13, 2017
Posted by Hari
No comments
Labels: Austerity, benefits, Big Society, Brexit, budget cuts, elections, immigration, inequality, jobs, pay, unions
A pound’s worth of product is not worth a pound when you’ve
made it. It’s worth a pound when someone has bought it. That’s why Britain
needs a pay rise.
There’s no rise in UK sales without a rise in UK incomes.
That’s why we’ve not had a recovery. Only a recovery in credit card debt!
Whichever party understands that, vote for them.
Wages have flatlined since July 2005, says the Office for
National Statistics. But it’s worse than that. Notoriously, the Average Weekly
Earnings (AWE) data never include the earnings of the self employed, which have been getting
worse, so that means there has been an overall decline.
If you’ve been one of the lucky ones who have seen his/her
earnings increase, you have a counterpart who saw the opposite. As the graph tells
us, the more you earned the more someone else didn’t. So if you’re trying to
sell them something, you’re in trouble too.
A balance must be struck between earnings rising too fast
(businesses and their customers can’t afford it. So the business goes bust) and
too slow or not at all (businesses can fill their shelves, but nobody can
afford to buy the damn stuff. So the business goes bust). That balance has been
lost since the 1970s. For too long wages, as a percentage of the nation’s GDP, have been falling.

Now take a look at the list of sectors where wages are falling. If your business depends on selling to people working in those sectors, you’d better pray they get a pay rise.
SOURCE: Resolution
Foundation
Yes, I said pray. Because businesses, in competition, find
it genuinely difficult to coordinate a pay rise lest someone breaks ranks and
win-wins by keeping pay down while selling to those who got the rise. That’s why
unions do us all a favour, by coordinating that pay rise. Government too, by
legislating that rise.
The Resolution Foundation, digging into Office for National
Statistics data on wages, says around 40 per cent of the workforce are in
sectors where pay is falling in real terms.
This is despite another “good performance” on jobs, with
fast growth in hours worked, employment remaining at a record high and
unemployment falling by 45,000. Although, notoriously again, the official employment
data says anyone who has worked a measly one hour a week is “employed”. One
hour! What a job that must be!
We’re wasting our time if jobs are being created, but
incomes aren’t rising. We’re driving with the hand brake on.
“But having a job matters more than having a pay rise!” says
the tub thumping right, who see low pay as a way of creating jobs. These are the same people who say “Those Commies, they
think full employment matters more than growing the economy.” They’re asking
for the same thing as the Commies now. Beautiful! Someone should tell them that
if wages don’t rise, economies simply don’t grow *.

* ...except, of course, through immigration. More people,
more GDP. Simples. No wonder neither New Labour nor the Tories cut immigration.
Immigration is not the cause of our problems **, it’s the only thing that’s making
our economy look as though it has a future.
** Do you seriously think if the population had risen through more British babies instead of immigrants, those past governments would have built the 250,000 houses a year we need, increased spending on the NHS and schools to shorten those queues, and raised those wages?
Tuesday, 18 April 2017
Tuesday, April 18, 2017
Posted by Hari
No comments
Labels: Austerity, Big Society, Brexit, elections, inequality, Labour, MP, politicians, Tories
KJ and Fee know who and what is to blame...
SOURCE Electoral Reform Society
In safe seats odds are firmly stacked against any voters
looking for change. The average constituency last changed hands between parties
in the 1960s, with some super safe seats having remained firmly in one-party
control since the time of Queen Victoria. That means, at every election, the
majority of seats can be predicted because of Westminster’s broken First Past
the Post electoral system. As consituencies are small and only elect one MP,
rival parties often don’t stand a chance of winning in hundreds of seats across
the UK. Even if they have significant support it counts of nothing if they
lose. As the loss of safe seats is rare, parties target their resources on a
small number of floating voters in marginal seats – meaning they give up on
millions of voters across the country. Four weeks away from the 2015 election
we could predict the results for over half of the total constituencies.
OUR RELATED STORIES:
More votes shifted left than right at GE2015. That's where the Labour party needs to be. See the stats
It's constituency boundaries wot won it: The Tories won more swing seats. But more people shifted their votes left
Apathy? Since the 1970s Brits vote less. But they take part in community, charity and civic activities more
British Election Study shows UKIP voters are well to the left of the Tories and even the LibDems
Every democracy, including ours, needs a left and a right party. Politicians who shift too close to their opposition are putting their careers before the nation
Most MPs vote the way they're told by the party. Many have second jobs earning tens of thousands. Half sit in safe seats they never lose. It's tough being an MP!
British Social Attitudes Survey: Tories & Labour are losing their core supporters
In 1997 the percentage of young people not voting shot up. Under 55- year-olds too
Since 1979, Labour or Tory, inequality rose whilst economic performance remained the same
"It's the economy, stupid" means the economies of individual families, not just UK Plc
Hope you didn't vote for anyone who helps pump up house prices
Lest we forget: all policies are pointless unless the banks are reined in
Sunday, 26 March 2017
Sunday, March 26, 2017
Posted by Hari
1 comment
Labels: Austerity, benefits, Big Society, Brexit, budget cuts, immigration, inequality, jobs, Labour, pay, taxation, Tories
Almost four decades of widening inequality caused Brexit. Who seriously thinks we’d have voted Brexit if low-end wages had risen in line with growing national wealth? If low income workers had been saving, rather than borrowing or going without? Instead, since 1979, the Tories increased inequality. Worse, Labour failed to reverse it. In fact, it crept up further. Immigration and the EU is getting the blame for that poverty. But neither caused it.

Source: Institute for Fiscal Studies http://www.ifs.org.uk/publications/4637
NOTE: The “Gini coefficient” is an internationally used measure of inequality, where zero corresponds with perfect equality (where everyone has the same income) and 1 corresponds with perfect inequality (where one person has all the income, and everyone else has zero income).
Inequality so what? It means we’ve become a nation of borrowers. Since the 1980s the bottom 50% have actually had to borrow money to cover their living costs. As the graph shows, the poorer you are, the more you had to borrow. And before you shout “If you can’t afford it, don’t buy it!” where do you think that huge chunk of the nation’s high street spending is going to come from, that’s paying your wages?! The "Savings Ratio" in the graph shows what percentage of income different groups (the poorest to the richest) save. A negative Savings Ratio means they are borrowing.
SOURCE: Resolution Foundation report "Gaining from growth: The final report of the Commission on Living Standards"
So, anyone hoping that Brexit voters will change their mind before the EU plug is pulled must therefore pray that inequality gets better. But Chancellor Philip Hammond’s budget is about to make it worse.
Here’s a graph of how incomes changed in the first four years of the “cataclysmically awful” bank bust (2007/8 to 2011/12), overlaid with how incomes will change thanks to Hammond’s budget (2016/17 to 2021/22).

SOURCE: Resolution Foundation report: “Are we nearly there yet? Spring Budget 2017 and the 15 year squeeze on family and public finances”
The lines show household net income growth (i.e. after including tax and benefits, and housing costs) for all working-age households. The poorest are on the left, the richest on the right. The bank-bust brown line shows everyone’s growth was negative, but the poorest suffered least and the super-rich most. Hammond’s blue line shows the poorest will suffer more than anyone has since 2007/8, while incomes will actually grow for the top 50%, the richer the better.
The graph comes from a report by the Resolution Foundation, who said: “the final four years of the current parliament look like being worse for poorer households than the financial crisis period itself.”
And before you accuse the Resolution Foundation of being too lefty, its boss is David Willetts, the Tory peer and former cabinet minister.
Someone needs to tell Hammond that a recovery needs people to spend money. But Hammond’s plan is to give more money to people who will save it, and less to people who would spend it. It’s not going to work. Duh!

Unprecedented. The never-ending stagnation has forced commentators to dive deeper and deeper into their tattered history books as every year passes. Yup, this has been the worst recovery for wages since... Napoleonic times!

SOURCE: Resolution Foundation report: “Are we nearly there yet? Spring Budget 2017 and the 15 year squeeze on family and public finances”
The Resolution Foundation report confirms it: “we are on course for average pay across the decade to 2020 to be lower than the average for the decade before. That would represent the worst decade for real earnings growth in 210 years.”
“But Brexit is not simply about inequality and wages. Get real! Plenty of Brexiters just don’t like immigration and the EU.” Sure, but there aren’t nearly enough of them to win a referendum on their own.
Both Theresa May and Philip Hammond voted Remain. Now they are the PM and Chancellor of Brexit Britain. What are they doing to prove their Brexit credentials? By deepening inequality, they ensure the fervour for Brexit never goes away. I guess that’s kind of pro-Brexit.
Saturday, 11 March 2017
Saturday, March 11, 2017
Posted by Hari
No comments
Labels: Austerity, benefits, Big Society, budget cuts, inequality, jobs, pay, taxation, Tories
Fee and Chris wonder whether a female PM's chancellor will do better...
SOURCE GUARDIAN: Women
bearing 86% of austerity burden, Commons figures reveal
Labour has urged the Conservatives to carry out a gender
audit of its tax and spending policies, as the shadow equalities minister,
Sarah Champion, published analysis showing that 86% of the burden of austerity
since 2010 has fallen on women. Champion said research carried out by the House
of Commons library revealed that women were paying a “disproportionate” price
for balancing the government’s books. The analysis is based on tax and benefit
changes since 2010, with the losses apportioned to whichever individual within
a household receives the payments. In total, the analysis estimates that the
cuts will have cost women a total of £79bn since 2010, against £13bn for men. It
shows that, by 2020, men will have borne just 14% of the total burden of
welfare cuts, compared with 86% for women. Many of the cuts announced in
earlier years by former chancellor George Osborne, including a four-year freeze
on many in-work benefits and reductions in the universal credit, are yet to
bite. Hammond has loosened Osborne’s fiscal rules, but he will press ahead with
most of the pre-planned austerity measures – though the tax credits rebellion
forced the government to promise not to look for fresh savings from the welfare
bill in future years. Mary-Ann Stephenson, co-director of the Women’s Budget
Group lobby group, condemned the Tories in light of the new research. She said:
“The chancellor’s decision to continue with the decisions of his predecessor to
cut social security for these low income families, at the same time as cutting
taxes, is effectively a transfer from the purses of poorer women into the
wallets of richer men.” The government publishes an analysis of the
differential impact of its policies at different points on the income scale,
but does not carry out a gender analysis.
OUR RELATED STORIES:
Why does everyone say inequality is falling, when it's rising? Because they're only counting incomes, not all wealth (property, pensions, etc.)
The NHS is not a “cost”. It creates nationwide jobs, technology, growth and wealth. Oh, and health
FTSE bosses take 2.5 days to earn what you earn all year. Data shows they don't deserve it
All governments agree to fix the housing crisis. Latest figures show we're still not even trying
Recovery? What recovery?! Bank of England director explains why broke Britain is still broken
Brexit was about inequality in Britain, not immigration. Have our politicians realised this?
See the Stats: Osborne's 2016 budget protected the wealthiest while the most vulnerable suffer
Inequality: the UK has 9 of the 10 poorest regions in Northern Europe. But Inner London is the richest
Graphs at a glance: With highest pay and highest job growth is London sucking the life out of Britain?
Londoners earn 15% more 'cos London is damn expensive! But the poorest 5th in London are paid only 4% more
Graphs at a glance: Britain is already a low-pay economy with falling average wages
Is your Cost of Living crisis over?! Average wages are still back where they were 10 years ago
Thursday, 16 February 2017
Thursday, February 16, 2017
Posted by Hari
No comments
Labels: Austerity, Big Society, budget cuts, education, inequality, public sector
Fee and KJ identify our last remaining hope for social mobility...
SOURCE GUARDIAN: Grammar schools ask parents for donations to cover funding cuts
The government’s plans for a revised “fair funding” formula
would mean most grammar schools were worse off as a result of the changes
proposed by the education secretary, Justine Greening – at a time when the
government is banking on grammar school expansion as a key domestic policy aim.
The Grammar School Heads’ Association said more than 100 of the existing 163
grammar schools in England would be worse off as a result of the proposals,
with more than 60 suffering deep cuts in annual budgets. The new “fair funding”
formula unveiled by Greening at the end of last year would impose cuts on
schools in mainly urban and suburban areas, and redistribute funding to more
rural regions that have received considerably lower per pupil funding for many
years. However, the policy failed to inject any new funds into the school
system, meaning that thousands of schools in England with frozen budgets will
be further disadvantaged. Grammar schools, which select by academic ability at
the age of 11, are worse off than many state schools because of their failure
to admit disadvantaged pupils eligible for additional government funding of
more than £900 each a year. Altrincham Grammar School for Boys has just 26
students receiving pupil premium funding out of 1,250 students enrolled, or
just 2% overall. Schools in England are not allowed to charge pupils for
teaching, attending or applying to join a school. But they are allowed to
approach parents for donations and to charge for additional activities such as
trips. While some grammar schools already ask parents for regular donations,
Tim Gartside, the headteacher of Altrincham Grammar School for Boys in
Trafford, said his school was considering asking parents for donations of £30
to £40 a month if the new formula goes ahead. Parents of pupils at Latymer
school, a grammar school in north London, were told last year that a “very
significant financial shortfall” could force it to cut staff, increase class
sizes and offer fewer subjects at GCSE and A-level. A letter from the school’s
headteacher and governors asked for donations of £30 to £50 a month, and told
parents such contributions were “considerably less than the average fees of an
independent school”. Other grammar schools known to have asked parents for
donations include Southend High School and Ilkley Grammar School.
OUR RELATED STORIES:
Official stats show Free Schools are no better, but they are cheaper to "build" from ex-office space!
School class sizes in England are among the largest in the OECD
The NHS is not a “cost”. It creates nationwide jobs, technology, growth and wealth. Oh, and health
FTSE bosses take 2.5 days to earn what you earn all year. Data shows they don't deserve it
All governments agree to fix the housing crisis. Latest figures show we're still not even trying
Recovery? What recovery?! Bank of England director explains why broke Britain is still broken
Brexit was about inequality in Britain, not immigration. Have our politicians realised this?
See the Stats: Osborne's 2016 budget protected the wealthiest while the most vulnerable suffer
Inequality: the UK has 9 of the 10 poorest regions in Northern Europe. But Inner London is the richest
Graphs at a glance: With highest pay and highest job growth is London sucking the life out of Britain?
Londoners earn 15% more 'cos London is damn expensive! But the poorest 5th in London are paid only 4% more
Graphs at a glance: Britain is already a low-pay economy with falling average wages
Is your Cost of Living crisis over?! Average wages are still back where they were 10 years ago
Wednesday, 1 February 2017
Wednesday, February 01, 2017
Posted by Hari
No comments
Labels: Austerity, Big Society, inequality, Osborne, pay, politicians, regulation, Tories
[UPDATED 8/3/17] SOURCE
GUARDIAN: George Osborne to be paid £650,000 for working one day a week
George Osborne has declared a salary of £650,000 a year for
working just four days a month at BlackRock, the world’s biggest fund
management firm, as well as almost £800,000 for speeches to financiers. The
former chancellor’s earnings were revealed in the latest register of MPs’
interests, which shows that he will make more than eight times his salary as a
backbencher as an adviser to the Wall Street firm. He was criticised for taking
the job earlier this year, because BlackRock may have benefited from reforms to
pension rules made while he was chancellor.
SOURCE DAILY MAIL: A shameless ex-Chancellor: the damning extent of Osborne's murky relationship with the Treasury and the finance giant that's just given him a six-figure job
Former Chancellor George Osborne, who is paid £75,000-a-year
to fulfil his duties as an MP, will be working one day a week as an adviser to
the vast American finance firm, BlackRock. This position will add around
£200,000 a year to the household income at the £4million Notting Hill home he
shares with wife Frances and their two young children. It has also reignited
the long-standing, and increasingly furious, public debate about the grubby
‘revolving door’ between government and the private sector. Since Tony Blair
left Downing Street and began lobbying for a mixture of wealthy corporations
and dodgy dictators, it has seemingly become almost automatic for ex-Cabinet
Ministers to cash in by using the experience they gained in office for commercial
gain. This shoddy practice is theoretically regulated by Acoba, a Whitehall
appointments watchdog. Yet in the past eight years, it has not attempted to
stop one single civil servant or politician from taking up a job. Osborne’s new
role at BlackRock was waved through despite the fact that he’d met executives
from the finance giant five times during his last two years at the Treasury. Even
without this latest scandalous twist about BlackRock, which has sparked calls
for a complete revamp of Parliamentary rules, there can be few dethroned senior
politicians who have been quite so shameless and proactive as Osborne in their
pursuit of a fast buck. His dash for cash began a mere four weeks after being
sacked, when he signed up to an American speaking agency called the Washington
Speakers’ Bureau. It represents 602 of what it calls ‘the world’s greatest
minds’ — including those noted intellectuals Tony Blair, Alastair Campbell,
George W. Bush, the former Alaska governor Sarah Palin and the magician David
Blaine — and has already helped Osborne earn £628,000 and counting since he
left the Treasury. Some of the financial institutions that have paid to hear
Osborne’s words of wisdom are, however, a rum old bunch. They include the
aforementioned HSBC, which has paid vast fines in recent years for
money-laundering offences in Mexico and Switzerland, and JP Morgan, which
bunged the former Chancellor £141,752 for two speeches. This is the same JP
Morgan that was last month fined £288 million by European regulators for
interest-rate manipulation. Then there is Citi, who coughed up £85,396 for two
Osborne speeches in November (this week it was hit with a £23 million fine in
the U.S. for mis-treating mortgage holders), and Aberdeen Asset Management,
which spent £51,328 getting him to talk to investors two months ago (and which
not long ago paid a £7.2 million penalty to the Financial Conduct Authority for
failing to properly protect client funds). Most curious of all, however, is a
mysterious organisation called Palmex Derivatives that flew Osborne to New York
in October, where it paid him £80,240.16 for giving a two-hour talk. This
secretive firm — whose operations are said to include financial and insurance
activities, security broking and fund management — has no website, no listed
telephone number or email address and was, until December, registered to a
detached brick home on a cul-de-sac in Southend-on-Sea. Now listed at a service
address in Caterham, Surrey, it has just two directors, a 34-year-old ‘futures
and options broker’ called Robert Palmer and his domestic partner Kirsty Lewis,
who describes her occupation on Companies House documents as ‘home-maker’. In
its last published accounts — up to January 2016 — Palmex listed assets of a
mere £54,598, so hiring the former Chancellor appears to represent a huge
investment for such an apparently small firm. And there is the intimate nature
of the relationship Osborne appears to have forged with his new employer,
BlackRock, while his day-job was running the British economy.
SOURCE BBC NEWS: Working
age families are still £345 poorer than they were before the financial crisis
The average UK household's disposable income - or spending
power - rose by nearly £600 in 2015-16. The typical household had £26,332 to
spend after taxes were paid and benefits received, the Office for National
Statistics (ONS) said. Senior statistician Claudia Wells said: "Household
incomes are above their pre-downturn peak overall, but not everyone is better
off... While retired households' incomes have soared in recent years,
non-retired households still have less money, on average, than before the
crash." The ONS puts growing private pensions ahead of the guaranteed rise
in the state pension - under the so-called triple lock - as the long-term
reason for the pick-up in pensioners' incomes. Household income has tended to
pick up faster over the years owing to an increasing number of couples both in
employment. Matt Whittaker, chief economist at the Resolution Foundation think
tank, said: "Strong employment growth, low inflation and rising pensioner
incomes over recent years have helped drive inequality down to its lowest level
in nearly 30 years... However, the last three years of growth have come back
off the back of a living standards squeeze so deep that typical working age
families are still £345 poorer than they were before the financial crisis. With
employment plateauing, productivity growth refusing to budge and inflation
rising, the risk is that this mini boom won't continue."
OUR RELATED STORIES:
The NHS is not a “cost”. It creates nationwide jobs, technology, growth and wealth. Oh, and health
FTSE bosses take 2.5 days to earn what you earn all year. Data shows they don't deserve it
All governments agree to fix the housing crisis. Latest figures show we're still not even trying
Recovery? What recovery?! Bank of England director explains why broke Britain is still broken
Brexit was about inequality in Britain, not immigration. Have our politicians realised this?
See the Stats: Osborne's 2016 budget protected the wealthiest while the most vulnerable suffer
Inequality: the UK has 9 of the 10 poorest regions in Northern Europe. But Inner London is the richest
Graphs at a glance: With highest pay and highest job growth is London sucking the life out of Britain?
Londoners earn 15% more 'cos London is damn expensive! But the poorest 5th in London are paid only 4% more
Graphs at a glance: Britain is already a low-pay economy with falling average wages
Is your Cost of Living crisis over?! Average wages are still back where they were 10 years ago
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