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If you think somebody is adopting multiple personas to fool you. Yes that is paranoia isn't it?
I'm not hiding behind multiple personas at all, once again you have succumbed to peer pressure and repeated a mistruth. What puzzles me is why you think i'm a multi...many people read this board without ever registering. I was one of them for years. There will be no convincing you as i fear the paranoia seems too far gone...ever admitted you were wrong on anything?
Is that because of Brexit or has the cost of living rises pushed people over the brink?
The majority of people striking are in jobs that can't be filled by unskilled, eastern European labour. Medical staff, train drivers and track maintenance crews, barristers, teachers, telecommunication engineers, tube and bus drivers, airline cabin crews, etc
It takes mere seconds to work out the current inflation rates, which for June 2022 are:
European Union: 9.6%
United Kingdon: 9.4%
https://tradingeconomics.com/country...ntinent=europe
Partly probably, but it's generally supply and demand problems, it's taking employers longer to fill all positions, skilled and unskilled as they have less choice now, the power is shifting away from employers back towards employees. Wages will have to go up in this stuation, although of course thats not going to help with inflation.
Thats why the BOE have increased interest rates to make it more expensive for employers/business to borrow, so more difficult for them to increase wages, it's going to be a strange year!
Well, apart from our (and Swansea's) well documented disadvantage in the loan market.
Not to wade into another Brexit debate, because I'd honestly rather shit in my hands and clap, but I wonder if Che Nunelly was one of the players who didn't have enough points? Was seemingly marked as a done deal by most of the Twitter accounts that were on the ball with other signings.
I presumed Bosman is about personal contracts however saw this
" Brexit has ended the free movement of labour between the UK and the EU. To this extent, it represents a reversal of the Bosman ruling. Clubs wishing to sign foreign players must now apply for a work permit, irrespective of whether these players are moving from EU or non-EU clubs"
I guess the work permit is key ..
On a related matter I feel the Boseman ruling has been slightly abused somewhat by greedy players and agents when they use the g the run down of contracts , as a result a club like the City loses a potential transfer fee with the player being tapped up in a pre contract discussion to bolster his wages for the saving the buying club benefits from , yes you could offer a new contract but that only helps the money clubs ,yes you tie them into longer contracts all of which effects the poorer clubs in my humble view as they cant finance such arrangements
Boseman
"The Bosman ruling meant that players could move to a new club at the end of their contract without their old club receiving a fee. Players can now agree a pre-contract with another club for a free transfer if the players' contract with their existing club has six months or less remaining""
What id like to know to know folk who wanted to n in EU and its free trade movement ,does this provide more opportunities for UK footballing youngsters ??
https://www.google.com/amp/s/worldfo...ertadores/amp/
here's a good description of how the new points system works.
if they aren't playing for a top nation, or in a good league then you can basically forget it looking at this.
but like I said, it makes it more difficult for anyone to bridge the gap to the biggest clubs.
Wigan, Brentford, Leicester all managed to uncover gems that escaped the radars of the top clubs. that route no longer exists, and if you do create some home grown talent that can get poached by the big clubs too
Where do you hire your cherry picker from mate?
Inflation is nothing to do with a countries size. You need to compare like with like. The debate here seems to be that Brexit has caused inflation (it hasn't) and so we should compare the UK with the EU. Inflation is currently higher in the EU..
You compare the biggest 3 for some reason. Why don't we compare the UK with the biggest 7 EU countries?
Poland - 15.5%
Romania - 15.05%
Spain 10.8%
Netherlands - 10.3%
UK - 9.4%
Italy - 7.9%
Germany - 7.5%
France - 6.1%
https://tradingeconomics.com/country...ntinent=europe
If you move the goalposts, you get a different result. And next month it will change again. The fact is inflation is not being caused by Brexit, it's high everywhere and is slightly higher in the EU at the moment. The causes lie elsewhere.
FWIW, comparing the UK with the G20 is perhaps the most useful way to analyse anything. G7 is a very small and selective group.
I picked the biggest three because they are in the G7, like the UK. It makes more sense to compare the UK to G7 countries than a EU average that includes lots of very small economies (Estonia is half the size of Wales) and countries bordering a war.
How does the UK’s inflation rate compare to the other G7 countries? What are the forecasts for the UK economy for the next 18 months and beyond? It’s not great, is it?
Nobody suggests Brexit is the cause of inflation, but it plays a part and makes dealing with it and fuelling growth that much more challenging. We have barriers to trade with the worlds biggest market, our biggest trading partner (50% of UK foreign trade in goods in 2019), that we didn’t have before. And we haven’t even implemented the checks for food imports yet. So the damage of Brexit isn’t even fully impacting. Those checks when implemented, do you think they will help with inflationary pressures?