Yes. A lot, since I was a teenager.
It doesn't help me parse your terse dismissal of what I wrote right after you asked me what I disagreed with, though.
Yes. A lot, since I was a teenager.
I laid out my thoughts as clearly as I could to highlight that I did not think Brexit was not a significant factor here. I think some people (not necessarily you) do think that Brexit was a signficant, or even major, factor. Given that we're indeed debating this in the 'Brexit Consequences' thread, I think you should entertain that possibility, even if you were not one of those people.Bird on a Fire wrote: Wed Oct 06, 2021 11:08 pm Sorry.
In your reply, you acknowledge almost everything I mentioned, but structured in such a way as to present the appearance of disagreement.
I'm going to sleep on it now though.
It has nothing to do with the house of lords. It's because the UK electoral system is so bad. In the last election the Conservatives got 43.6% of the vote, yet ended up with a majority of 80 MPs - which is 56.2%. In the last Irish general election, the votes and seat percentages for the top three parties were: 24.5 -> 23.1, 22.2 -> 23.1, and 20.9 -> 21.9. Hugely more represetative.
According to the article, it will make the journey much faster, so should exert a downward pressure on prices. In theory Brexit should not have made a difference as the EU, UK and Morocco are signatories to the TIR convention, so transit through the EU does not require customs checks - though in practice checks on other vehicles might cause unavoidable delays.sheldrake wrote: Wed Oct 06, 2021 2:00 pm It will be interesting to see what effect the new direct shipping route to Morocco will have on fruit and veg in UK supermarkets.
https://www.thegrocer.co.uk/buying-and- ... 21.article
If GDP growth was the main factor of deciding how good a country's economy was, Libya has the best-performing economy in the world.temptar wrote: Wed Oct 06, 2021 3:58 pmI recall that being linked with stockpiling in case of a no deal though...
I prefer individual candidates to be accountable rather than parties. Party list systems for PR can weaken that.Millennie Al wrote: Thu Oct 07, 2021 12:23 amIt has nothing to do with the house of lords. It's because the UK electoral system is so bad. In the last election the Conservatives got 43.6% of the vote, yet ended up with a majority of 80 MPs - which is 56.2%. In the last Irish general election, the votes and seat percentages for the top three parties were: 24.5 -> 23.1, 22.2 -> 23.1, and 20.9 -> 21.9. Hugely more represetative.
I agree with you about Frost. If a Tory is in a safe seat, it's because a significant majority of people in that place want to be represented by them, however. Neil Hamilton was ousted for corruption when he was in a formerly 'safe' seat for example.temptar wrote: Thu Oct 07, 2021 10:00 am Ireland does not use a list system. I am not sure safe seat Tories could be considered accountable. Unelected ministers like David Frost definitely don't look totally accountable.
The employment rate is a better long term measure (its the proportion of the 16-64 age population who are in work). The problem with the unemployment rate is that it doesn't capture people who are not working and not looking for work.sheldrake wrote: Thu Oct 07, 2021 11:22 am Unemployment currently lower than at any point during the Blair or Brown governments https://www.ons.gov.uk/employmentandlab ... s/mgsx/lms
behind Luxembourg? what the f.ck are these figures? there’s only about 30,000 people in the whole country?sheldrake wrote: Thu Oct 07, 2021 10:58 am In 2019 the UK was 3rd in the world for inward direct investment to businesses based here, after the US and Luxembourg
https://data.oecd.org/fdi/inward-fdi-st ... ountry.htm
Luxembourg is a tax arbitrage centre under agreements Junker set up when he was the PM of Luxembourg. Lots of businesses that really do their business in other countries are registered as Luxembourg entities, or shift their profits to Luxembourg entities via 'licensing fees', e.g. Amazon in the UK.plodder wrote: Thu Oct 07, 2021 11:45 ambehind Luxembourg? what the f.ck are these figures? there’s only about 30,000 people in the whole country?sheldrake wrote: Thu Oct 07, 2021 10:58 am In 2019 the UK was 3rd in the world for inward direct investment to businesses based here, after the US and Luxembourg
https://data.oecd.org/fdi/inward-fdi-st ... ountry.htm
The Intel factory is unlikely have employed more than 10-20 people. Modern chip fabs are *extremely* automated. The profits would also likely be shunted to Luxembourg or Ireland (as a stepping stone to a caribbean tax haven) via licensing fees (we hardly made any profit on these chips gov'nor, we have to pay for the patent royalties for the design which is owned by Inteltec Dublin Ltd, sorry mate).plodder wrote: Thu Oct 07, 2021 11:42 am be interesting to know how many “employed” people are also getting tax credits or UC, HB etc, ie their roles are subsidised by the state.
my impression is that a lot of jobs are marginal at best.
they won’t be working in the new intel factory, that’s for sure.
You said you didn't understand why a little country like Luxembourg had so much money flow into it. Now you do. You're welcome.plodder wrote: Thu Oct 07, 2021 12:08 pm you could have a thread to yourself, where you demonstrate how clever you are to yourself, for the benefit of yourself. You’re knocking down your own strawmen.
Almost 600,000 actually and almost half of them were not born in Luxembourg. In fact, it has focused on foreign direct investment since independence. An additional 200,000 travel in from surrounding countries to work. It punches far above its weight as do a lot of educated small countries. This brings both benefits and disadvantages of course. It is an expensive place to live but equally, the quality of life there is pretty good.plodder wrote: Thu Oct 07, 2021 11:45 ambehind Luxembourg? what the f.ck are these figures? there’s only about 30,000 people in the whole country?sheldrake wrote: Thu Oct 07, 2021 10:58 am In 2019 the UK was 3rd in the world for inward direct investment to businesses based here, after the US and Luxembourg
https://data.oecd.org/fdi/inward-fdi-st ... ountry.htm
It's a tax haven.temptar wrote: Thu Oct 07, 2021 12:23 pm
In short: small nimble countries are different to big cumbersome ex-Empires.
I agree about the British protectorates (they don't show up on the inward investment figures) and the City (to a point, it doesn't actually have low taxes for business profits there, but a lot of city finance uses offshore structures).temptar wrote: Thu Oct 07, 2021 12:26 pm Dude, the part you are missing is so are a lot of Britiah protectorates and the City of London. But you do you.