Could this little story be happening in real life?
Sunday, 13 February 2022
What opportunities is Sir Jacob looking for?
Wednesday, 9 February 2022
Where Michael Gove's storyliners got their ideas from
India's budget!
Tuesday, 25 January 2022
seven reasons why council housing is an all round winner
Council housing benefits the many as well as the few...
and should be the Keynesian keystone of any genuine levelling up project.
Seven winners in building council housing
- Lending money to a local authority to build houses is a rock solid cannot fail investment
- The Council acts as developer and builds at cost
- New jobs are born and grow in housing departments
- Construction industry benefits for years
- tenants benefit from secure accommodation to build secure families
- The benefits system covers rent for tenants in need
- In due course housing brings in a high income return as funding is paid off. This can be reinvested by the council.
Wednesday, 19 January 2022
How Boris Johnson is writing himself into history
UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson is using his creative journalist skills to write himself into history.
Thursday, 13 January 2022
Why levelling up can't work
Jobs gone forever
Most of the 'red wall' towns in the North and Midlands were manufacturing, mill and mining towns. Most of their jobs have gone never to return.
The Joseph Rowntree Foundation calculate the minimum income to raise a family of two children is just under £40K/annum. This is the bare minimum, making a real living wage about £18/hour. (https://bit.ly/jrfminimumincome) Half what Mr Sunak offers.
Few firms can afford a living wage.
Green, environmental jobs are supposed to come to the rescue but these jobs are in the wrong areas and there aren't enough of them.
Could construction help? Offices and flats are bolted together by a crane driver and a couple of erecters now. Construction needs a lot less skilled workers than in the pre-Thatcher daze. Flexi jobs (multi-skilled workers) are being trained up to become the norm nowadays.
Less workers are required at a time when more work is needed
Chancellor Sunak says education and training will do the trick.
Education and training to do what?
Jobs must come first. Just as demand stimulates supply.
Mr Sunak's plan is just a re-run of the Youth Opportunity Scheme that flopped in the 1980s.
Even if we had a radical government, Labour perhaps, that reshored (brought back) all the lost industries. Technology has moved on so there wouldn't be as many jobs as in the pre-Thatcher era. The higher wages the levelled up workers would need would make UK manufactured goods too expensive for the levelled up working people to buy.
Britain is in a downward spiral
No one in government or opposition is putting forward the radical ideas needed.
A quarter of the levelling up budget is to be spent on culture for example. New museums, art galleries and theatres like ones they've just got in Doncaster.
How can a museum, art gallery and theatre level up Doncaster
or anywhere else for that matter?
The white paper? 400 pages written by civil servants for civil servants and local government officers to pore over and write long reports about.
Job creation here but nothing that will level anything or anybody up.
Wednesday, 12 January 2022
Why Mr Johnson will be cleared by an enquiry
Wednesday, 8 December 2021
Why most Christmas songs are from the 1950s and 60s
summary of the TUC budget proposals to Rachel Reeves
Summary of the TUC's budget submission to Rachel Reeves The UK faces an unprecedented set of challenges, including low growth falling ...
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To a certain and measurable extent... State run bureaucracies are good for the economy. Over staffed and not totally efficient state sup...
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Summary of the TUC's budget submission to Rachel Reeves The UK faces an unprecedented set of challenges, including low growth falling ...
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Can Keynesian economics pull us out of the mud Advokating Keynes Britain's is stuck in the mud of Thatcherism and is sinking more ...