Agree, though I'm puzzled as to why the furlough scheme has been extended until September. Will businesses still be closed in September ?
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"Still fuming at all the brilliant people who got made redundant in October because Rishi Sunak refused to extend furlough until there were just hours to go before the deadline, by which time decisions had already been made. They could have kept their jobs for another year" - https://twitter.com/RMCunliffe/statu...84836058525705
Do you think that's a fair comment? The challenges of winter surely could have been more expected?
yes of course that was a mistake, a massive mistake
but as we were learning different things, Most still had hopes ( in Oct ) that we had seen the back of Covid and lockdowns, it was all pretty fluid , ideally it should have been in place that furlough was on a rolling date, i guess they have learnt that and thus we see it still available for Sept
Back to the extended Furlough / SE help and the Universal increase, they are really trying to look after them who need it
Corbyn was a radical communist for wanting to raise corporation tax to 26%. Sunak is a hero and saviour for raising CT to 25%.
Freezing personal allowances (which the highest earners don't get) or tax thresholds (which are insignificant to the highest earners) increases the blended rates of income tax paid by lower earners but not (or less than) that paid by the highest earners.
A week ago people were creaming for him to extend furlough and the £20 a week uplift. He has done that. Now they say he hasn't done it for long enough. There is no way he is ever going to win that battle. Whatever they are given people always want more.
Not SAGE who had recommended circuit breaker by the 21st of September. Around the same time that Sunak was introducing herd immunity scientists into the conversation though?
There have been workers left out of support all together: newly self employed (200K), new starters (300K), PAYE freelancers (390K), those who are part-time employed and part-time self-employed (1.175million) and many more not helped throughout the pandemic.
As ever with budgets there will be some good (increasing corporation tax but keeping it lowest in G7 is an example of improvement, keeping £20 uplift) and some bad, but my bias says you're being very lenient on someone who seems to be better at delivering a message than getting the message right.
I'm one of thsoe who fell down the middle regarding employed/self employed help. And I couldn't get any other help either.
As for the advice given/taken. I always take advice from doctors and scientists with a pinch of salt. They will always tell you the worst possible outcome as the likeliest one (Although this time they may have been right) and they are very loathe to agree with any good news, always wanting to temper it with a dose of foreboding doom and gloom. It's just in their nature.
It like your doctor always tells you 'You mustn't drink' when you are taking this or that medicine. It doesn't really make any difference but they instinctively want to stop people drinking. (Even though half of them drink too much themselves)
Time to scrap that hs2 train line save a few 100 billion....
Labour take but, if accurate, isn't ten years of slashing away at services, cuts to real health budgets part of why we struggled so much with the pandemic in the first place?Quote:
“Buried in this is a return to smaller public services, cutting public sector budgets, cutting hospital budgets, freezing pay.”
I think the statistics show that whilst the UK has suffered more than most with the pandemic, there have been staggering differences between countries due to other factors. The UK has seen 1817 deaths per million. India 113. That's just 7% compared with the UK. India's a poorer country per capita, much more densely populated, and large families living under one roof. However India has one of the lowest BMI's at 21. The UK's is over 27.
well yes but I think this time around will be a bit different after all the majority of us were asked by the current government to stand on our doorsteps clapping our key workers last summer and the masses duly obliged . Lets hope our opposition parties makes this a big factor when we are asked to put our X in the box 12 months before the next general election
£407 Billion spent on protecting business,jobs Covid ,time to pay sadly ,noticed he nicked Corbyn's corporation tax election rate hyke promise, should please labour .
To be honest, I thought it was a pretty good budget, especially when you consider the state of the nation's finances at the moment. It could have been a lot, lot worse.
Doesn't sound like the IFS are very impressed.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-56276953
Fantastic pay deal for those that have put their lives on the line for us , quite literally , from the conservatives
1 percent pay rise for nurses and doctors
That clap Boris was doing was clearly one handed
What a bunch of tossers