SissokoWasGood (BoL)
Paul Stalteri
Not sure if you saw the news this morning, but public finances aren't nearly as bad as Reeves told us they were.
The current tax burden is the highest since WWII, due to exceed that and become the highest ever by the end of this parliament.
The government absolutely does not have an income problem, it has a spending problem.
They are still spending more than they did before and planning to spend more in the future. Until they control spending, these budgets will only be a sticking plaster.
Cut the spending and the problem is solved for a dozen budgets into the future.
The NHS is long overdue a trip to a farm where it can happily run around and play. The govt can both reduce its liability to healthcare and improve healthcare beyond recognition with that simple step.
There are far more efficient and effective ways to improve education without taxing and wasting more. For starters, the VAT increase is only helping to overload the state system. Offering a tax break to those paying for independent schooling would both simultaneously reduce the load on the state sector and vastly improve the education for those kids joining the independent schools.
What kind of poverty are you talking about here? The made up, loaded, politicised relative "poverty" or actual, real poverty?
What do you think the end result will be of incentivising having more children for families that don't work? The data are pretty clear about the fact that kids born to families that don't work are unlikely to ever look for work themselves or complete a solid education. What might seem, to some, on a very superficial level, to be a good idea will likely entrench generations of more and more welfare liabilities. But Labour don't care about that, those people are overwhelmingly likely to vote Labour.
Don't believe the headlines. Not the ones written by Labour nor the ones written by the Conservatives.
When Labour got in, were you paying more or less tax than in 2010 (in real terms)?
When Labour got in, was the govt spending more or less than in 2010?
Once you've answered those questions, ask yourself how it is that the govt are taking more of our money, spending more of our money, yet we are getting less for it.
You know the best way to ensure poor people stay poor? Stop them working.
Every measure that costs business, costs jobs. Every ridiculous piece of legislation that makes it harder to employ people, costs jobs. Every pointless increase in minimum wage, costs jobs.
Two steps will make huge and lasting changes to the welfare problems our country has. Increase the gap between welfare and working and make it easier to employ people.
Almost everything you’re saying comes back to the Government cutting spending.I totally respect your opinion on that, I just think we had a long austerity experiment which yielded nothing much. And meanwhile real people suffered a lot.
Real people rely on the NHS. And just to take your child poverty point, plenty of other data suggests that keeping kids in poverty actually costs the state more in the long run. If they’re hungry, and can’t study, there’s a massive argument that that is what keeps them entrenched in that lifestyle. I’m not sure the data on whether the two child cap impacted people’s propensity to have children supports that it altered anyone’s behaviour?
As for the ‘public finances not being as bad as Reeves told us they were’, if the argument being put forward is that actually things are great, I’m just not buying it. She did what she did to give herself over 20bn of headroom, and the OBR saying things were slightly better than anticipated didn’t remove the necessity to do that. As I said, I accept that she could have got there with spending cuts. I just think that real people rely on this spending, and it’s time they got some relief. We had the Tories for 14 years and we had austerity for definitely 6, arguably 9 of those years. We’ve then had Brexit, Covid, Truss (who from what it sounds like you would actually agree a lot with her program) and a global cost of living crisis.