ChatterBank1 min ago
Which Benefits Would You Cut?
The Daily Mail has asked. I'm very glad I'm not a decision maker as I wouldn't have a clue where to start.
I do think that state pensions should be taken out of the equation altogether, though.
http:// www.dai lymail. co.uk/n ews/art icle-31 36020/W hich-be nefits- cut-Cam eron-Os borne-e xtra-12 billion .html
I do think that state pensions should be taken out of the equation altogether, though.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.State Pension is now classed as a 'Benefit' which never used to be the case as you have to pay into it for 35 years to get it. I think it should be taken out of the 'Benefit' category altogether. at least the 'earned' part of it should not be a 'Benefit' it is just getting back what you put into it. I worked for years paying extra into my state pension fund as 'earnings related supplement' now getting my own cash back is classed as a 'benefit'. It is just like calling a private pension a benefit!
Eddie...I think it is only called a "benefit" because the same Government Dept, that deals with all the other real benefits, takes care of the Old Age pension as well. If the wording were to be changed, it would still cost the same. And the cost will be going up in the future, as we all living so much longer than we did only a few years ago.
But there are ways to cut the value of the Old Age pension, by the back door so to speak, by changing the way that annual increases are calculated.
We should keep a close eye for that over the next 5 years !
But there are ways to cut the value of the Old Age pension, by the back door so to speak, by changing the way that annual increases are calculated.
We should keep a close eye for that over the next 5 years !
Ann, foreign aid is a teeny tiny proportion of government spending and there is far more to it than simply handing money out.
"And there is a commercial angle to the aid we give, as it is often delivered via partner companies that profit as a result.
In 2011-12, the Department for International Development (DFID) awarded 135 contracts to 58 contractors, worth almost £500m.
Beneficiaries included big-name firms such as PwC, Mott MacDonald and Adam Smith International.
And DFID's Food Retail Industry Challenge Fund (FRICH) has seen £1.9m in grants given to UK businesses including the supermarkets Waitrose and Sainsbury's to help get more African produce on to shop shelves.
So from the developing world's perspective, aid can sometimes seem like a way of cementing the established relationships between the rich 'global north' and the poor 'global south' - with a transfer of cash from the former to the latter, but within power structures that favour the former."
http:// www.bbc .co.uk/ news/uk -319280 78
"And there is a commercial angle to the aid we give, as it is often delivered via partner companies that profit as a result.
In 2011-12, the Department for International Development (DFID) awarded 135 contracts to 58 contractors, worth almost £500m.
Beneficiaries included big-name firms such as PwC, Mott MacDonald and Adam Smith International.
And DFID's Food Retail Industry Challenge Fund (FRICH) has seen £1.9m in grants given to UK businesses including the supermarkets Waitrose and Sainsbury's to help get more African produce on to shop shelves.
So from the developing world's perspective, aid can sometimes seem like a way of cementing the established relationships between the rich 'global north' and the poor 'global south' - with a transfer of cash from the former to the latter, but within power structures that favour the former."
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