-
Re: Welsh Labour vote to increase in Senedd Members from 60 to 96
Quote:
Originally Posted by
life on mars
Please use the sharing tools found via the share button at the top or side of articles. Copying articles to share with others is a breach of FT.com T&Cs and Copyright Policy. Email
licensing@ft.com to buy additional rights. Subscribers may share up to 10 or 20 articles per month using the gift article service. More information can be found at
https://www.ft.com/tour.
https://www.ft.com/content/2c555bc7-...b-c2489e1f8304
As Germany’s biggest union, IG Metall, begins discussions on demands for a wage increase of up to 8.2 per cent for the country’s 85,000 steelworkers in the coming weeks, Birgit Dietze expects reverberations for workers across Europe.
Why is Germany and France and in debt , inflation rising is it Brexit ?????????
Eurozone as a whole has a worse wage lag than UK
Job vacancies in Europe rising
I could go on ..
Let's take a look at wages between 2010 and 2017 https://www.ft.com/content/c4437c9e-...5-50daf11b720d
Our wage growth is only currently better (over what, a one week snippet you've sniped from somewhere) because most EU countries haven't had 12 years of basically no wage growth.
Do you honestly believe the standard of life is better in the UK than say Franch, Netherlands, Germany any of the scandavian countries etc?
-
Re: Welsh Labour vote to increase in Senedd Members from 60 to 96
Quote:
Originally Posted by
JamesWales
I must admit, for a group of people who portray themselves as pro-european, there are an awful lot of them who don't actually follow what is happening in continental Europe.
reddit.com/r/iamverysmart
-
Re: Welsh Labour vote to increase in Senedd Members from 60 to 96
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Rjk
so what's the issue here?
with 650 MPS, the UK has 1MP for every 100,000 people or thereabouts. It really is about economies of scale and its hardly surprising that the larger the population the lower number of MPs per capita that is required.
I wonder what India and Chinas per capita figures are?
-
Re: Welsh Labour vote to increase in Senedd Members from 60 to 96
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Doucas
This is classic whataboutery. Why not respond to the subject matter in hand?
-
Re: Welsh Labour vote to increase in Senedd Members from 60 to 96
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Rjk
good
Is it good? Surely the best for the country would have the best people nominated, irrespective of gender. If that means 15 women, 7 men and 3 not quite sures then so be it.
-
Re: Welsh Labour vote to increase in Senedd Members from 60 to 96
Quote:
Originally Posted by
DryCleaning
Is it good? Surely the best for the country would have the best people nominated, irrespective of gender. If that means 15 women, 7 men and 3 NOT QUITE SURES then so be it.
:hehe::hehe::hehe:
-
Re: Welsh Labour vote to increase in Senedd Members from 60 to 96
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Doucas
Please don't ‘go on’. What you say has nothing to do with the thread anyway.
Public debt has gone up because the Government had to pay for the pandemic to keep people like you and me alive and in work. If you want to see a real increase in the countries debt, help elect a new labour government next time around and then you will see what real debt looks like.
The cost of living ‘crisis’ is being felt all over the world, lead by large increases in energy costs due to factors that are nothing to do with Brexit. Also in the last 15 years we have enjoyed record low interest rates and low inflation and everyone has benefitted from this, including the people who are moaning the loudest now that inflation has increased.
Wages increases have been lower but as I said so has inflation. Wages certainly haven't ‘stagnated’ as you make out. If someone is prepared to work hard and put in the hours there are still rewards to be had and opportunities to better oneself. Some people seem to think that people should get a pay rise no matter how little effort (if any) they put in.
-
Re: Welsh Labour vote to increase in Senedd Members from 60 to 96
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Doucas
Let's take a look at wages between 2010 and 2017
https://www.ft.com/content/c4437c9e-...5-50daf11b720d
Our wage growth is only currently better (over what, a one week snippet you've sniped from somewhere) because most EU countries haven't had 12 years of basically no wage growth.
Do you honestly believe the standard of life is better in the UK than say Franch, Netherlands, Germany any of the scandavian countries etc?
What I do know that wages are lagging behind in very country in the world this is not difficult just google wage lagging and almost every country pop up , and the Eurozone in the last decade has underperformed compared to the UK , hence the Eastern Europeans coming to the UK to work or did they come take a wage cut ????
-
Re: Welsh Labour vote to increase in Senedd Members from 60 to 96
Quote:
Originally Posted by
life on mars
What I do know that wages are lagging behind in very country in the world this is not difficult just google wage lagging and almost every country pop up , and the Eurozone in the last decade has underperformed compared to the UK , hence the Eastern Europeans coming to the UK to work or did they come take a wage cut ????
I thought most of the Eastern Europeans coming here in the years before Brexit were Poles and Romanians
-
Re: Welsh Labour vote to increase in Senedd Members from 60 to 96
Quote:
Originally Posted by
dml1954
Please don't ‘go on’. What you say has nothing to do with the thread anyway.
Public debt has gone up because the Government had to pay for the pandemic to keep people like you and me alive and in work. If you want to see a real increase in the countries debt, help elect a new labour government next time around and then you will see what real debt looks like.
The cost of living ‘crisis’ is being felt all over the world, lead by large increases in energy costs due to factors that are nothing to do with Brexit. Also in the last 15 years we have enjoyed record low interest rates and low inflation and everyone has benefitted from this, including the people who are moaning the loudest now that inflation has increased.
Wages increases have been lower but as I said so has inflation. Wages certainly haven't ‘stagnated’ as you make out. If someone is prepared to work hard and put in the hours there are still rewards to be had and opportunities to better oneself. Some people seem to think that people should get a pay rise no matter how little effort (if any) they put in.
The world is in the same dilemma have to move beyond the hatred of Brexit and Boris desperate times ..
Big economises are stuttering as are the job markets , wages , inflation and they include Germany .Japan , North America , I d just suggest you perhaps examine the plights of these countries in more depth ..
As stated to Dorcus , why were folk coming to the UK ?? Why not stay in wealthy Germany / France if they are that better or go to a Nordic country .
Please use the sharing tools found via the share button at the top or side of articles. Copying articles to share with others is a breach of FT.com T&Cs and Copyright Policy. Email licensing@ft.com to buy additional rights. Subscribers may share up to 10 or 20 articles per month using the gift article service. More information can be found at https://www.ft.com/tour.
https://www.ft.com/content/6f325773-...1-6bc986ee90fa
Trade balance of the overall eurozone, which had a trade deficit in goods of €32.4bn in April, a reversal from a surplus of €14.9bn a year earlier. Eurozone trade figures for May are due to be released on July 15.
Germany records first monthly trade deficit since 1991 as import costs soar
Lower demand for exports also contributes to €1bn negative trading balance for May
Eurozone’s long-stagnating wages start to rise as cost of living soars
After a decade of little to no pay growth, workers are finally starting to see higher settlements
All of the above from the FT who are no friend of the Tories or Brexit
-
Re: Welsh Labour vote to increase in Senedd Members from 60 to 96
Quote:
Originally Posted by
cyril evans awaydays
I thought most of the Eastern Europeans coming here in the years before Brexit were Poles and Romanians
Not really adding anything to the thread but Poland is central Europe :biggrin:
-
Re: Welsh Labour vote to increase in Senedd Members from 60 to 96
Quote:
Originally Posted by
life on mars
Some more cost data below all a bit vague but to does seem the cost is rising and rising and rising now at 69 million
Then we have the clever vagueness of how much this actually costs
Just think its not a good view to be talking about this with folks struggling
https://www.itv.com/news/wales/2022-...-from-60-to-96
For me it the hidden costs stuff , don't forget this is annual costs ...
If Id written this about stopping Boris enlarging the government and the cost with health struggling we'd see a lot of happy clappy folks , we need to examine our health ,education, crime ,transport performance and provision before this type of shite
Good point.
Boris Johnson isn't expanding the Senedd so he can concentrate on the concerns that you listed there.
How's Boris Johnson doing with health, crime and education?
Health:
https://news.sky.com/story/boris-joh...chdog-12644840
Crime:
www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-60250678.amp
Education:
https://www.ccmb.co.uk/member.php?21223-life-on-mars
-
Re: Welsh Labour vote to increase in Senedd Members from 60 to 96
Quote:
Originally Posted by
DryCleaning
Not really adding anything to the thread but Poland is central Europe :biggrin:
Me adding even less! :hehe:
Eastern Europe is, as the name says, the eastern part of Europe. According to the United Nations definition, countries within Eastern Europe are Belarus, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Moldova, Poland, Romania, Slovakia, Ukraine and the western part of the Russian Federation (see: European Russia map).
All these countries are using Eastern European Time (EET = UTC +2 hours) except Belarus (Minsk Time, UTC+3 hours), the Kaliningrad Oblast (UTC+3 hours) and the Russian Federation (Moscow Time UTC+4 h).
-
Re: Welsh Labour vote to increase in Senedd Members from 60 to 96
Quote:
Originally Posted by
cyril evans awaydays
Me adding even less! :hehe:
Eastern Europe is, as the name says, the eastern part of Europe. According to the United Nations definition, countries within Eastern Europe are Belarus, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Moldova, Poland, Romania, Slovakia, Ukraine and the western part of the Russian Federation (see: European Russia map).
All these countries are using Eastern European Time (EET = UTC +2 hours) except Belarus (Minsk Time, UTC+3 hours), the Kaliningrad Oblast (UTC+3 hours) and the Russian Federation (Moscow Time UTC+4 h).
Poland
:popcorn:
-
Re: Welsh Labour vote to increase in Senedd Members from 60 to 96
Quote:
Originally Posted by
DryCleaning
Jeez, all I wanted to do was ridicule LoMs assertion that Eastern Europeans were fleeing the Eurozone to the UK by highlighting the lands of the zloty and the leu and the next thing I know I'm debating the geographical provenance of the land to the east of the Oder! :hehe:
-
Re: Welsh Labour vote to increase in Senedd Members from 60 to 96
Quote:
Originally Posted by
cyril evans awaydays
Jeez, all I wanted to do was ridicule LoMs assertion that Eastern Europeans were fleeing the Eurozone to the UK by highlighting the lands of the zloty and the leu and the next thing I know I'm debating the geographical provenance of the land to the east of the Oder! :hehe:
:hehe:
-
Re: Welsh Labour vote to increase in Senedd Members from 60 to 96
Quote:
Originally Posted by
dml1954
If you want to see a real increase in the countries debt, help elect a new labour government next time around and then you will see what real debt looks like.
Nice to see this old chestnut re-emerge. It's utter bollocks and has been proven to be nonsense time and again.
Out of interest, care to say make any comparisons between our national debt in 2010 after a global recession and any time close to the beginning of the Covid pandemic?
-
Re: Welsh Labour vote to increase in Senedd Members from 60 to 96
I think the increase is needed and I support it, the massive increase in powers since 1999 means that it's morally right that there should be more scrutiny and debate about all new legislation, as well as an improvement in decision making (all Governments get things right and wrong like us all).
On a more recent note the outrageous attacks and rollbacks on Welsh law and democracy by a hypocritical Government 150 miles away who are happy enough to call out other countries attacks on democracy as if they are the shining light of society means that strengthening the Welsh Government is critical for future generations.
-
Re: Welsh Labour vote to increase in Senedd Members from 60 to 96
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Eric the Half a Bee
Nice to see this old chestnut re-emerge. It's utter bollocks and has been proven to be nonsense time and again.
Out of interest, care to say make any comparisons between our national debt in 2010 after a global recession and any time close to the beginning of the Covid pandemic?
In 2007 debt/GDP was 34%, and it rose dramatically to its current levels following the financial crash in 2008. It peaked at 81% in 2016 and started to fall, rising rapidly again after the pandemic to its current level of 95%.
The debt/GDP rose continuously post financial crash, as to try and balance the books at that time would have ruined the economy. You cannot just remove £150bn of public expenditure from the economy to balance the books, it has to be undertaken by growing the economy, improving tax receipts and targeted cuts. Whilst the incumbent government succeeded in the first two (the Tories are not the party of low taxation), it is highly subjective whether they achieved the third aim.
We should see a faster reduction of debt/GDP this time around, as there was a lot of one off spending during the pandemic.
link
-
Re: Welsh Labour vote to increase in Senedd Members from 60 to 96
Quote:
Originally Posted by
DryCleaning
In 2007 debt/GDP was 34%, and it rose dramatically to its current levels following the financial crash in 2008. It peaked at 81% in 2016 and started to fall, rising rapidly again after the pandemic to its current level of 95%.
The debt/GDP rose continuously post financial crash, as to try and balance the books at that time would have ruined the economy. You cannot just remove £150bn of public expenditure from the economy to balance the books, it has to be undertaken by growing the economy, improving tax receipts and targeted cuts. Whilst the incumbent government succeeded in the first two (the Tories are not the party of low taxation), it is highly subjective whether they achieved the third aim.
I would argue that growth during the period was fragile at best. Lots of working class people never had pay rises that matched inflation yet wages continued to soar at the opposite end. Cuts that affected people's livelihoods also stifled growth.
I have always been of the opinion that the cuts were more to do with ideology as an attack on public services than economics. It's an easy one to win. People see less being done with the taxes they pay so they start to see public services as a waste of money.
So to recap your point, the incumbent government barely achieved 1, which stifled 2 and they probably felt they failed with 3 as they wanted deeper and more savage cuts, regardless of who it affected.
-
Re: Welsh Labour vote to increase in Senedd Members from 60 to 96
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Wozza16
I think the increase is needed and I support it, the massive increase in powers since 1999 means that it's morally right that there should be more scrutiny and debate about all new legislation, as well as an improvement in decision making (all Governments get things right and wrong like us all).
On a more recent note the outrageous attacks and rollbacks on Welsh law and democracy by a hypocritical Government 150 miles away who are happy enough to call out other countries attacks on democracy as if they are the shining light of society means that strengthening the Welsh Government is critical for future generations.
The other argument for it is that leaving the EU means more policy decisions are made in the UK - in devolved areas this will mean greater decision making happening at the senedd.
-
Re: Welsh Labour vote to increase in Senedd Members from 60 to 96
Quote:
Originally Posted by
JamesWales
The other argument for it is that leaving the EU means more policy decisions are made in the UK - in devolved areas this will mean greater decision making happening at the senedd.
Which repatriated EU powers are covered by the current devolution settlement?
-
Re: Welsh Labour vote to increase in Senedd Members from 60 to 96
-
Re: Welsh Labour vote to increase in Senedd Members from 60 to 96
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Citizen's Nephew
How many of those European parliaments are devolved?
-
Re: Welsh Labour vote to increase in Senedd Members from 60 to 96
Quote:
Originally Posted by
life on mars
Please use the sharing tools found via the share button at the top or side of articles. Copying articles to share with others is a breach of FT.com T&Cs and Copyright Policy. Email
licensing@ft.com to buy additional rights. Subscribers may share up to 10 or 20 articles per month using the gift article service. More information can be found at
https://www.ft.com/tour.
https://www.ft.com/content/2c555bc7-...b-c2489e1f8304
As Germany’s biggest union, IG Metall, begins discussions on demands for a wage increase of up to 8.2 per cent for the country’s 85,000 steelworkers in the coming weeks, Birgit Dietze expects reverberations for workers across Europe.
Why is Germany and France and in debt , inflation rising is it Brexit ?????????
Eurozone as a whole has a worse wage lag than UK
Job vacancies in Europe rising
I could go on ..
Well! you got your sovereignty back and control over your borders.What could be better.