ChatterBank0 min ago
When Will The Tmie Be Right?
23 Answers
http:// news.sk y.com/s tory/10 61210/p m-well- come-th rough-i f-we-ho ld-firm
No doubt about it, if we did what labour want we would all be in the dark smelly stuff for decades to come. But at some point we will need to invest in the country and investing in infrastructure is clearly the best way (If only labour had done that instead of 5 a day co ordinators and the other 800 000 pinko non-jobs it created).
So when will the time be right? And when it comes will we hear howls of 'U-Turn' from the left (even though after this time it would hardly be a u-turn).
In fact are the Labour partly responsible for a rigid stance because of their attitude and howling if fiscal poicy is adjusted?
No doubt about it, if we did what labour want we would all be in the dark smelly stuff for decades to come. But at some point we will need to invest in the country and investing in infrastructure is clearly the best way (If only labour had done that instead of 5 a day co ordinators and the other 800 000 pinko non-jobs it created).
So when will the time be right? And when it comes will we hear howls of 'U-Turn' from the left (even though after this time it would hardly be a u-turn).
In fact are the Labour partly responsible for a rigid stance because of their attitude and howling if fiscal poicy is adjusted?
Answers
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£50,000 salary = £15,000 goes straight back in tax/ni
plus Council Tax
plus mortgage repayments
plus utility payments
So we started with 50k from the tax payer, we get back 15k straight away whoopie!
then we give some of the rest to private companies to do wit what they will.
I see so would anyone rather just keep the 50K?
By definition 100% of the public sector is a burden, it should be as small as it can be.
i.e. not funded by benefits
what's left goes back into the economy
£50,000 salary = £15,000 goes straight back in tax/ni
plus Council Tax
plus mortgage repayments
plus utility payments
So we started with 50k from the tax payer, we get back 15k straight away whoopie!
then we give some of the rest to private companies to do wit what they will.
I see so would anyone rather just keep the 50K?
By definition 100% of the public sector is a burden, it should be as small as it can be.
i.e. not funded by benefits
what's left goes back into the economy
-- answer removed --
/By definition 100% of the public sector is a burden/
Not 100%
No more so than any Private Sector supplier is a 'burden' when you need to pay them to provide the same services; healthcare, waste collection, street cleaning, police and the multitude of tasks that make our society function.
The only difference is the 'fringe' services you may opt not to buy; and any margins debate you might want to have over respective cost efficiencies
Not 100%
No more so than any Private Sector supplier is a 'burden' when you need to pay them to provide the same services; healthcare, waste collection, street cleaning, police and the multitude of tasks that make our society function.
The only difference is the 'fringe' services you may opt not to buy; and any margins debate you might want to have over respective cost efficiencies
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