Family & Relationships1 min ago
Another Waste Of Overseas Aid
17 Answers
Further to my thread yesterday about cutting Overseas Aid and spending it on our elderley. Just another massive waste.
http:// www.dai lymail. co.uk/n ews/art icle-40 31268/T he-damn ing-ver dict-28 5millio n-aid-w asted-u seless- airport .html
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No best answer has yet been selected by lindapalmara. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Linda, there is a lot of wastage that need to be addressed including the £300 given to the lazy MPs that sign into the H.P. just to sleep, all MPs should use the cheapest form of travel, the Izz up bar should be shut, what other job has a bar that can be used during working times for drinks / food whilst some struggle to feed their children.
Britain spends more on overseas aid than any other EU country, in fact we are the second highest contributor in the World.
http:// i.daily mail.co .uk/i/p ix/2016 /01/05/ 00/2FCC A15C000 00578-3 384689- image-a -18_145 1954531 826.jpg
Why is this, when we have food banks, can't care for our elderly etc, etc, etc?
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Why is this, when we have food banks, can't care for our elderly etc, etc, etc?
mikey4444
/// £285 million would keep the social care budget going for about 3 seconds. ///
Read the real facts mikey.
/// The average weekly UK nursing home fee is £726, or £37,752 a year. The £285.5million squandered on the St Helena airport could have paid for a staggering 7,560 care home places for an entire year. ///
/// £285 million would keep the social care budget going for about 3 seconds. ///
Read the real facts mikey.
/// The average weekly UK nursing home fee is £726, or £37,752 a year. The £285.5million squandered on the St Helena airport could have paid for a staggering 7,560 care home places for an entire year. ///
I think you're confusing two things there AOG. Care home fees are quite often, privately funded. Social Care spending 2013/14:
Looking at the different types of service4, the greatest area of spend in 2013-14 was day and domiciliary provision5, which made up 46 per cent (£7.9 billion) of total expenditure. This compares to a real terms figure of £7.7 billion (43 per cent of the total) in 2008-92, an increase of 2 per cent in real terms spending.
The largest area of spending by client type6 in 2013-14 was on people aged 65 and over, which made up 51 per cent (£8.8 billion) of total expenditure. This compares to a real terms figure of £10.1 billion (56 per cent of the total) in 2008-96, a decrease of 12 per cent in real terms spending.
Spending on direct payments7 rose to £1.4 billion (eight per cent of total spending) in 2013-14. This represents a 103 per cent increase in real terms spending on 2008-9 when direct payments made up £680 million (four per cent of total expenditure).
I make that £18.1 Billion in total.
£285m = 0.0016389% of the overall budget.
Looking at the different types of service4, the greatest area of spend in 2013-14 was day and domiciliary provision5, which made up 46 per cent (£7.9 billion) of total expenditure. This compares to a real terms figure of £7.7 billion (43 per cent of the total) in 2008-92, an increase of 2 per cent in real terms spending.
The largest area of spending by client type6 in 2013-14 was on people aged 65 and over, which made up 51 per cent (£8.8 billion) of total expenditure. This compares to a real terms figure of £10.1 billion (56 per cent of the total) in 2008-96, a decrease of 12 per cent in real terms spending.
Spending on direct payments7 rose to £1.4 billion (eight per cent of total spending) in 2013-14. This represents a 103 per cent increase in real terms spending on 2008-9 when direct payments made up £680 million (four per cent of total expenditure).
I make that £18.1 Billion in total.
£285m = 0.0016389% of the overall budget.
Hi Linda- a lot of the arguments have been exhausted following AOG's thread a few days ago covering the money wasted on the same airport project.
http:// www.dai lymail. co.uk/n ews/art icle-40 31268/T he-damn ing-ver dict-28 5millio n-aid-w asted-u seless- airport .html
The foreign aid budget is currently fixed at 0.7% of GDP and there is no appetite among the major parties to seek to reduce it, so there is no prospect for some years, if ever, of diverting money from the aid budget to fund important areas like elderly care .
The issues for now are really how we ensure the money committed to foreign is spent in the best way and how we fund important areas domestically. Going forwards though I think there is a case for reviewing whether we should spend more or less on foreign aid in the 2020s, although reducing it would be sending a signal to the world that we are not a major player in economic matters and that we don't want to try to secure business in the future from these developing countries in the future or have any influence on them politically..
http://
The foreign aid budget is currently fixed at 0.7% of GDP and there is no appetite among the major parties to seek to reduce it, so there is no prospect for some years, if ever, of diverting money from the aid budget to fund important areas like elderly care .
The issues for now are really how we ensure the money committed to foreign is spent in the best way and how we fund important areas domestically. Going forwards though I think there is a case for reviewing whether we should spend more or less on foreign aid in the 2020s, although reducing it would be sending a signal to the world that we are not a major player in economic matters and that we don't want to try to secure business in the future from these developing countries in the future or have any influence on them politically..
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