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Re: Proof the "Trickle Down" effect is a myth? : Sat Jan 25, 2014 8:38 am  
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Re: Proof the "Trickle Down" effect is a myth? : Sat Jan 25, 2014 10:19 am  
Sal Paradise wrote:
If I could legally avoid paying tax I would and I do - I have an ISA and I partake in a share save scheme at work both give me tax benefits and I suspect if you were honest so do you. So comparing legal avoidance to what amounts to theft isn't apples and apples.

Using ISAs and share schemes are not tax avoidance though. The article DaveO linked to specifically said that avoidance does not include tax planning (making use of tax relief for the purpose they were intended). They define tax avoidance as:
HMRC wrote:
bending the rules of the tax system to gain a tax advantage that Parliament never intended. It often involves contrived, artificial transactions that serve little or no commercial purpose other than to produce a tax advantage. It involves operating within the letter but not the spirit of the law.
Last edited by Cookridge_Rhino on Sat Jan 25, 2014 10:23 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Proof the "Trickle Down" effect is a myth? : Sat Jan 25, 2014 10:20 am  
DaveO wrote:
Why do you ask? They are mega-rich and make themselves richer by regular share buy backs (as opposed to using this cash to invest in the business) while we see reports of their employees resorting to food banks and suffering from low pay. You don't see anything the slightest bit wrong with this situation?


Ok. You don't want to answer the question, fair enough. We can move on to the next one you prompted: where does the cash they use to buy back shares go?

Whether it's the right thing for a business to buy shares back (or sell owned shares) is far too complex to look into here. There are reasons a business might buy it's shares and reasons it might not. Without a serious analysis of Wal-Mart's business we couldn't answer that, and even then I suspect professional analysts would differ on the answer.
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Re: Proof the "Trickle Down" effect is a myth? : Sun Jan 26, 2014 6:27 am  
Mintball wrote:
Yes. You keep repeating this. You have also stated that someone who isn't poor themselves shouldn't campaign for a fairer society. Strangely, you've yet to answer, AFAIK, the question of whether that means that, in your opinion, only slaves should have campaigned against slavery.

I what?

Are you drunk so early in the day?

If you'd been paying any attention at all, this has been discussed, more than once, on here. It has been pointed out, for instance, that you cannot simply walk into a foodbank and grab what you fancy. Checks are done first to ensure that you are in such need.

Current figures are between 5-600,000. The prediction is for this to hit the million mark this year Story – it's Sky News, so not something anyone could class as 'left-wing'. And that's without mentioning the Red Cross food parcels and the Save the Children spending.

Trying to pretend that need is only a matter of spending on the 'right' things is nothing other than the same sort of sheer nastiness of the likes of the liar IDS and his cronies. I hadn't quite placed you in that bracket before. I hope it's mere delusion on the basis of propaganda.

Conflating Word and anything other than Apple is revealing. Personally, I would vastly prefer not to use Word, but again, it's industry standard, regardless of it being dross. So I use it because I have little realistic choice in terms of compatibility.

And I use it on Macs, because those are the industry standard. Perhaps I should try going into an office next time and refusing to use the computers that are there and telling them that I'll only use something that that they can find that probably doesn't even exist.

I can imagine that working well.

Quark is rather old hat these days. Priced themselves out of the market stupidly and generally replaced by Adobe InDesign – the new industry standard, although whether that will remain the case now they're trying to up charges by only making upgrades available as downloads remains to be seen. Personally, in my work, I use InDesign for page make-up, plus Illustrator, PhotoShop and LightRoom for graphics and photographic work.

I suspect that you didn't think that I did anything other than write, did you?

At least I have some.

According to a brief 2012 report in the Observer, "ethi-tech ... has yet to get going". Story

So perhaps I should jack in my work altogether and find another job. One that doesn't use any tech at all. Obviously. Although given that the highest level of tech we used when I started in journalism was typewriters, one can hardly predict what job will be a nice, safe, tech-free zone in a short time in the future, can one?

I await with interest your response on ethics. And no, I don't mean a county to the east of London.

So, let's try this old one again: there are as many jobs available as there are people of working age, are there? And those jobs pay a living wage and are full time, are they?


I think it is admirable that you seek to see what in your eyes is a better society - for me it is about being realistic i.e. what is genuinely possible. I mentioned times when fairness/equality was forced on people and it didn't work. Given the chance it would appear most people prefer a society where opportunity is available to better yourself at the expense of others.

On food banks - it is half of 1% of the population - this is unacceptable and your quite correct in that - however how many people do we have willingly living on the streets and how many of them use food banks? What I am trying to understand is what is the true increase and how much of that is down to cuts in benefits? Saying a million people is too sensationalised a number to be accurate.

On benefits - the genuine claimers i.e. the mentally/physically disabled society has an obligation to support these people. Of the rest it depends on your view of what benefits should provide. Should they provide for a very basic existence or should they provide for a lifestyle as if you were working? Should those on benefits be better off than somebody who is prepared to go out and work?

On ethics - I have my own standards of how I treat people - that is what matters to me. I will give a chance to a young person wherever possible - and in that my actions are tangible/verifiable and speak much about the person I am than an words on a thread in a nameless message board. I have numerous Apple products, even though I know their business ethics 'may' be questionable - why because they improve the quality of my own life. I know what is coming now - my ethics stink etc - but I bet if you look around at all the products you use to enhance your life a sizeable chunk will fall into the same ethical category. It is almost impossible to avoid them.

I suspect you would like to be a full time writer - your blog heading suggests you are? However I suspect this is a market where capacity far exceeds demand and it is difficult to making a living from it full time.

I have said this again - the world is bad place where equality simply doesn't/cannot exist. Every human is different with different experiences, different morals, different ideals and very different methods in how they hope to achieve their goals to standardise that is unrealistic.

On jobs paying a living wage - of the 34m working in this country the stats suggest 5m are earning below the living wage i.e. 14% that still says 86% are earning above the living wage. How many are drawing more on benefits - all included i.e. rent, child support, rates support etc - in a week than the living wage for 40 hours work after tax and NI.
Mintball wrote:
Yes. You keep repeating this. You have also stated that someone who isn't poor themselves shouldn't campaign for a fairer society. Strangely, you've yet to answer, AFAIK, the question of whether that means that, in your opinion, only slaves should have campaigned against slavery.

I what?

Are you drunk so early in the day?

If you'd been paying any attention at all, this has been discussed, more than once, on here. It has been pointed out, for instance, that you cannot simply walk into a foodbank and grab what you fancy. Checks are done first to ensure that you are in such need.

Current figures are between 5-600,000. The prediction is for this to hit the million mark this year Story – it's Sky News, so not something anyone could class as 'left-wing'. And that's without mentioning the Red Cross food parcels and the Save the Children spending.

Trying to pretend that need is only a matter of spending on the 'right' things is nothing other than the same sort of sheer nastiness of the likes of the liar IDS and his cronies. I hadn't quite placed you in that bracket before. I hope it's mere delusion on the basis of propaganda.

Conflating Word and anything other than Apple is revealing. Personally, I would vastly prefer not to use Word, but again, it's industry standard, regardless of it being dross. So I use it because I have little realistic choice in terms of compatibility.

And I use it on Macs, because those are the industry standard. Perhaps I should try going into an office next time and refusing to use the computers that are there and telling them that I'll only use something that that they can find that probably doesn't even exist.

I can imagine that working well.

Quark is rather old hat these days. Priced themselves out of the market stupidly and generally replaced by Adobe InDesign – the new industry standard, although whether that will remain the case now they're trying to up charges by only making upgrades available as downloads remains to be seen. Personally, in my work, I use InDesign for page make-up, plus Illustrator, PhotoShop and LightRoom for graphics and photographic work.

I suspect that you didn't think that I did anything other than write, did you?

At least I have some.

According to a brief 2012 report in the Observer, "ethi-tech ... has yet to get going". Story

So perhaps I should jack in my work altogether and find another job. One that doesn't use any tech at all. Obviously. Although given that the highest level of tech we used when I started in journalism was typewriters, one can hardly predict what job will be a nice, safe, tech-free zone in a short time in the future, can one?

I await with interest your response on ethics. And no, I don't mean a county to the east of London.

So, let's try this old one again: there are as many jobs available as there are people of working age, are there? And those jobs pay a living wage and are full time, are they?


I think it is admirable that you seek to see what in your eyes is a better society - for me it is about being realistic i.e. what is genuinely possible. I mentioned times when fairness/equality was forced on people and it didn't work. Given the chance it would appear most people prefer a society where opportunity is available to better yourself at the expense of others.

On food banks - it is half of 1% of the population - this is unacceptable and your quite correct in that - however how many people do we have willingly living on the streets and how many of them use food banks? What I am trying to understand is what is the true increase and how much of that is down to cuts in benefits? Saying a million people is too sensationalised a number to be accurate.

On benefits - the genuine claimers i.e. the mentally/physically disabled society has an obligation to support these people. Of the rest it depends on your view of what benefits should provide. Should they provide for a very basic existence or should they provide for a lifestyle as if you were working? Should those on benefits be better off than somebody who is prepared to go out and work?

On ethics - I have my own standards of how I treat people - that is what matters to me. I will give a chance to a young person wherever possible - and in that my actions are tangible/verifiable and speak much about the person I am than an words on a thread in a nameless message board. I have numerous Apple products, even though I know their business ethics 'may' be questionable - why because they improve the quality of my own life. I know what is coming now - my ethics stink etc - but I bet if you look around at all the products you use to enhance your life a sizeable chunk will fall into the same ethical category. It is almost impossible to avoid them.

I suspect you would like to be a full time writer - your blog heading suggests you are? However I suspect this is a market where capacity far exceeds demand and it is difficult to making a living from it full time.

I have said this again - the world is bad place where equality simply doesn't/cannot exist. Every human is different with different experiences, different morals, different ideals and very different methods in how they hope to achieve their goals to standardise that is unrealistic.

On jobs paying a living wage - of the 34m working in this country the stats suggest 5m are earning below the living wage i.e. 14% that still says 86% are earning above the living wage. How many are drawing more on benefits - all included i.e. rent, child support, rates support etc - in a week than the living wage for 40 hours work after tax and NI.
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Re: Proof the "Trickle Down" effect is a myth? : Sun Jan 26, 2014 8:49 am  
Sal Paradise wrote:
On jobs paying a living wage - of the 34m working in this country the stats suggest 5m are earning below the living wage i.e. 14% that still says 86% are earning above the living wage. How many are drawing more on benefits - all included i.e. rent, child support, rates support etc - in a week than the living wage for 40 hours work after tax and NI.


That is the endless loop that, if a politician could fix, would ensure him/her the Prime Ministers job for a long time.

1. You earn less than the notational "living wage".
2. You are below the Income Tax threshold and pay miniscule amounts of NIS
3. You are entitled to tax credits to top up your income.
3. Your nett take from the Benefits Agency exceeds your nett contribution, but you are working, you are one of the good guys and not a scrounger.
4. Repeat for decades.

Meantime the employer benefits from cheap labour which only stays because the benefits system allow them to be housed and fed and the employee continues to be a nett draw-down on the tax take for decades.

At least it keeps some civil servants in a job I suppose.
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Re: Proof the "Trickle Down" effect is a myth? : Sun Jan 26, 2014 10:02 am  
Sal Paradise wrote:
I think it is admirable that you seek to see what in your eyes is a better society - for me it is about being realistic i.e. what is genuinely possible. I mentioned times when fairness/equality was forced on people and it didn't work. Given the chance it would appear most people prefer a society where opportunity is available to better yourself at the expense of others...


I think that you're conflating things.

It would be factually correct that some people, in the UK, today, feel that fairness and equality are "forced" on them. The B&B business where the owner doesn't like gays.

They want to be able to run a business where they can refuse to serve customers on the basis of an individual belief about an entire group.

As Jerry has pointed out in the past, this is no different from the 'no blacks or dogs' signs of a few decades ago.

Change to something fairer and more equal was forced on people by law.

What sort of percentage of the population today would really think that being able to post such signs again would be acceptable?

The point is that we can – in the UK – occasions of greater fairness and equality being created by, one might say, legal "force". And the majority accept it and move on – move forward.

An idea of equality/fairness is not the sole preserve of the USSR or the Eastern Bloc.

Indeed, if this country (and others) had not made many other moves forward, and changes to law etc over the centuries, where do you think we would be today?

Sal Paradise wrote:
... On food banks - it is half of 1% of the population - this is unacceptable and your quite correct in that - however how many people do we have willingly living on the streets and how many of them use food banks? What I am trying to understand is what is the true increase and how much of that is down to cuts in benefits? Saying a million people is too sensationalised a number to be accurate...


Those doing the foodbank work at the point of handing it out don't just give it to anyone who walks through the doors. Much of the increase in foodbank use is down to falling wages (and hours – underemployment, in other words) combined with the rising cost of living.

Huge numbers of those using foodbanks are in work.

On those living on the streets, this has been rising for years. It's been shown over the years to include many ex-service personnel who can find it very difficult to fit back into civilian life. There is also a long-term issue of not enough safe, residential care for people with mental illnesses.

Only this morning I spotted a story about numbers of children locked in police cells for exactly the same reason. Story.

Sal Paradise wrote:
On benefits - the genuine claimers i.e. the mentally/physically disabled society has an obligation to support these people. Of the rest it depends on your view of what benefits should provide. Should they provide for a very basic existence or should they provide for a lifestyle as if you were working? Should those on benefits be better off than somebody who is prepared to go out and work?


A number of points here, but I'll stick with just two:

• what is the "lifestyle as if you were working", when we have working people needing benefits and using foodbanks?

• I don't think anyone has denied that there are pîsstakers out there. But until there is a job for everyone man and woman of working age, then politicians demanding that such people are forced into work is ridiculous. There are not enough jobs for the willing let alone the unwilling, who I'd suggest they far outnumber. Indeed, as the BoE boss has now acknowledged, there are masses of people who are in some work, but cannot get enough to meet their own needs. The entire business about the 'scroungers' is a deflection. Similarly with getting the disabled into work when there are not enough jobs to go around – and not least when the same government scraps Remploy.

Sal Paradise wrote:
... On ethics - I have my own standards of how I treat people - that is what matters to me. I will give a chance to a young person wherever possible - and in that my actions are tangible/verifiable and speak much about the person I am than an words on a thread in a nameless message board. I have numerous Apple products, even though I know their business ethics 'may' be questionable - why because they improve the quality of my own life. I know what is coming now - my ethics stink etc - but I bet if you look around at all the products you use to enhance your life a sizeable chunk will fall into the same ethical category. It is almost impossible to avoid them...


Well, I'm not going to have a go at your ethics – I never have: just your previous apparent refusal to discuss ethics in any terms other than what you perceive to be mine, which you have had more the odd dig at, remember. :)

As I've said before, it's difficult to be as ethical as one might wish in 'the real world', but where possible, I try.

Sal Paradise wrote:
... I suspect you would like to be a full time writer - your blog heading suggests you are? However I suspect this is a market where capacity far exceeds demand and it is difficult to making a living from it full time...


It would be part of what I'd ideally do, although in terms of day-to-day work, sub-editing is probably one of my favourite aspects – I like the geekiness of solving layout puzzles, for instance, and doing (some of) the photography that I do.

Sal Paradise wrote:
I have said this again - the world is bad place where equality simply doesn't/cannot exist. Every human is different with different experiences, different morals, different ideals and very different methods in how they hope to achieve their goals to standardise that is unrealistic...


And again, I'd say that much of what we take for granted today had to be worked for in the past and would have been resented by some at the time.

Equally, to reiterate: to talk of society being 'fairer' is not to talk of, for instance, everyone being on the same pay.

Sal Paradise wrote:
On jobs paying a living wage - of the 34m working in this country the stats suggest 5m are earning below the living wage i.e. 14% that still says 86% are earning above the living wage. How many are drawing more on benefits - all included i.e. rent, child support, rates support etc - in a week than the living wage for 40 hours work after tax and NI.


I'm not entirely sure I'm getting what you mean here, but if I do ...

To clarify, most people with a child will receive child benefit.

Otherwise, this seems to be returning to the issue of a situation where (some) businesses are happy for the taxpayer to pay subsidise them. That – and the cost of living in general and housing in particular.

Just to take this one a little further (and again, it's been discussed before).

We have a shortage of housing, which is a factor in further driving up the costs of housing to what some people are suggesting is dangerous in terms of yet another bubble, and what others certainly see as unsustainable.

If you were to embark on a massive council house building/refurbishment programme you could, in the slightly longer term, deal with the housing shortage. It would also mean that many people would no longer need housing benefit or possibly even other in-work benefits, because their own pay might stretch further.

In the process, you'd create jobs in order to build or refurbish those homes, therefore taking at least some people out of unemployment (or underemployment) and thus cutting benefit costs. Indeed, if they're paid a decent wage, they then start paying tax and NI. They also have money to spend in local economies – at the pub, watching RL, at the cinema or the local restaurant. We know where that goes – more job creation etc. And all that is good for the national economy.

To repeat: nobody that I can see is suggesting that everyone should be paid X sum, regardless of the work that they do.

But a fairer society is possible and, even at the most pragmatic level, since it would benefit the majority of individuals and the country as a whole, would seem to be a worthwhile and sensible aim.

The situation we have at the moment, on the other hand, is unsustainable. Endlessly rising housing costs at the same time that many jobs are continuing to be cut – it's not just new jobs that have limited or zero-contract hours, but many existing jobs are being reduced.

That's one of the factors that is hampering local economies and the national one.
Sal Paradise wrote:
I think it is admirable that you seek to see what in your eyes is a better society - for me it is about being realistic i.e. what is genuinely possible. I mentioned times when fairness/equality was forced on people and it didn't work. Given the chance it would appear most people prefer a society where opportunity is available to better yourself at the expense of others...


I think that you're conflating things.

It would be factually correct that some people, in the UK, today, feel that fairness and equality are "forced" on them. The B&B business where the owner doesn't like gays.

They want to be able to run a business where they can refuse to serve customers on the basis of an individual belief about an entire group.

As Jerry has pointed out in the past, this is no different from the 'no blacks or dogs' signs of a few decades ago.

Change to something fairer and more equal was forced on people by law.

What sort of percentage of the population today would really think that being able to post such signs again would be acceptable?

The point is that we can – in the UK – occasions of greater fairness and equality being created by, one might say, legal "force". And the majority accept it and move on – move forward.

An idea of equality/fairness is not the sole preserve of the USSR or the Eastern Bloc.

Indeed, if this country (and others) had not made many other moves forward, and changes to law etc over the centuries, where do you think we would be today?

Sal Paradise wrote:
... On food banks - it is half of 1% of the population - this is unacceptable and your quite correct in that - however how many people do we have willingly living on the streets and how many of them use food banks? What I am trying to understand is what is the true increase and how much of that is down to cuts in benefits? Saying a million people is too sensationalised a number to be accurate...


Those doing the foodbank work at the point of handing it out don't just give it to anyone who walks through the doors. Much of the increase in foodbank use is down to falling wages (and hours – underemployment, in other words) combined with the rising cost of living.

Huge numbers of those using foodbanks are in work.

On those living on the streets, this has been rising for years. It's been shown over the years to include many ex-service personnel who can find it very difficult to fit back into civilian life. There is also a long-term issue of not enough safe, residential care for people with mental illnesses.

Only this morning I spotted a story about numbers of children locked in police cells for exactly the same reason. Story.

Sal Paradise wrote:
On benefits - the genuine claimers i.e. the mentally/physically disabled society has an obligation to support these people. Of the rest it depends on your view of what benefits should provide. Should they provide for a very basic existence or should they provide for a lifestyle as if you were working? Should those on benefits be better off than somebody who is prepared to go out and work?


A number of points here, but I'll stick with just two:

• what is the "lifestyle as if you were working", when we have working people needing benefits and using foodbanks?

• I don't think anyone has denied that there are pîsstakers out there. But until there is a job for everyone man and woman of working age, then politicians demanding that such people are forced into work is ridiculous. There are not enough jobs for the willing let alone the unwilling, who I'd suggest they far outnumber. Indeed, as the BoE boss has now acknowledged, there are masses of people who are in some work, but cannot get enough to meet their own needs. The entire business about the 'scroungers' is a deflection. Similarly with getting the disabled into work when there are not enough jobs to go around – and not least when the same government scraps Remploy.

Sal Paradise wrote:
... On ethics - I have my own standards of how I treat people - that is what matters to me. I will give a chance to a young person wherever possible - and in that my actions are tangible/verifiable and speak much about the person I am than an words on a thread in a nameless message board. I have numerous Apple products, even though I know their business ethics 'may' be questionable - why because they improve the quality of my own life. I know what is coming now - my ethics stink etc - but I bet if you look around at all the products you use to enhance your life a sizeable chunk will fall into the same ethical category. It is almost impossible to avoid them...


Well, I'm not going to have a go at your ethics – I never have: just your previous apparent refusal to discuss ethics in any terms other than what you perceive to be mine, which you have had more the odd dig at, remember. :)

As I've said before, it's difficult to be as ethical as one might wish in 'the real world', but where possible, I try.

Sal Paradise wrote:
... I suspect you would like to be a full time writer - your blog heading suggests you are? However I suspect this is a market where capacity far exceeds demand and it is difficult to making a living from it full time...


It would be part of what I'd ideally do, although in terms of day-to-day work, sub-editing is probably one of my favourite aspects – I like the geekiness of solving layout puzzles, for instance, and doing (some of) the photography that I do.

Sal Paradise wrote:
I have said this again - the world is bad place where equality simply doesn't/cannot exist. Every human is different with different experiences, different morals, different ideals and very different methods in how they hope to achieve their goals to standardise that is unrealistic...


And again, I'd say that much of what we take for granted today had to be worked for in the past and would have been resented by some at the time.

Equally, to reiterate: to talk of society being 'fairer' is not to talk of, for instance, everyone being on the same pay.

Sal Paradise wrote:
On jobs paying a living wage - of the 34m working in this country the stats suggest 5m are earning below the living wage i.e. 14% that still says 86% are earning above the living wage. How many are drawing more on benefits - all included i.e. rent, child support, rates support etc - in a week than the living wage for 40 hours work after tax and NI.


I'm not entirely sure I'm getting what you mean here, but if I do ...

To clarify, most people with a child will receive child benefit.

Otherwise, this seems to be returning to the issue of a situation where (some) businesses are happy for the taxpayer to pay subsidise them. That – and the cost of living in general and housing in particular.

Just to take this one a little further (and again, it's been discussed before).

We have a shortage of housing, which is a factor in further driving up the costs of housing to what some people are suggesting is dangerous in terms of yet another bubble, and what others certainly see as unsustainable.

If you were to embark on a massive council house building/refurbishment programme you could, in the slightly longer term, deal with the housing shortage. It would also mean that many people would no longer need housing benefit or possibly even other in-work benefits, because their own pay might stretch further.

In the process, you'd create jobs in order to build or refurbish those homes, therefore taking at least some people out of unemployment (or underemployment) and thus cutting benefit costs. Indeed, if they're paid a decent wage, they then start paying tax and NI. They also have money to spend in local economies – at the pub, watching RL, at the cinema or the local restaurant. We know where that goes – more job creation etc. And all that is good for the national economy.

To repeat: nobody that I can see is suggesting that everyone should be paid X sum, regardless of the work that they do.

But a fairer society is possible and, even at the most pragmatic level, since it would benefit the majority of individuals and the country as a whole, would seem to be a worthwhile and sensible aim.

The situation we have at the moment, on the other hand, is unsustainable. Endlessly rising housing costs at the same time that many jobs are continuing to be cut – it's not just new jobs that have limited or zero-contract hours, but many existing jobs are being reduced.

That's one of the factors that is hampering local economies and the national one.
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Re: Proof the "Trickle Down" effect is a myth? : Sun Jan 26, 2014 10:21 am  
JerryChicken wrote:
That is the endless loop that, if a politician could fix, would ensure him/her the Prime Ministers job for a long time.

1. You earn less than the notational "living wage".
2. You are below the Income Tax threshold and pay miniscule amounts of NIS
3. You are entitled to tax credits to top up your income.
3. Your nett take from the Benefits Agency exceeds your nett contribution, but you are working, you are one of the good guys and not a scrounger.
4. Repeat for decades.

Meantime the employer benefits from cheap labour which only stays because the benefits system allow them to be housed and fed and the employee continues to be a nett draw-down on the tax take for decades.

At least it keeps some civil servants in a job I suppose.


Nobody on here has yet proved this mythical government supporting big business - is the amount paid to supplement incomes of the lower paid higher or lower than the sum of NI, Corporation tax, Tax on Dividends combined? If its lower then the myth that government supports big business is just that a myth.
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Re: Proof the "Trickle Down" effect is a myth? : Sun Jan 26, 2014 11:04 am  
Sal Paradise wrote:
Nobody on here has yet proved this mythical government supporting big business - is the amount paid to supplement incomes of the lower paid higher or lower than the sum of NI, Corporation tax, Tax on Dividends combined? If its lower then the myth that government supports big business is just that a myth.


Off the top of my head:

• concentration on 'benefits scroungers' and refusal to do anything meaningful about tax avoidance/evasion by big corporates;

• creation of 'workfare' as a scheme that big businesses were able to use in order to lay off paid workers (IIRC, Asda being a particular culprit) and reluctance to do anything about it;

• continued privatisation – even to companies that have already screwed up more than once: G4S, for instance;

• reluctance – at best – to do anything meaningful in terms of banking regulation, and continued efforts to pretend that big finance was not behind the recession;

• fracking – with added financial benefits to companies to get involved.

And so on.

Edited to add the following: it's a read, but here's another quite specific one – big business and public health.
Sal Paradise wrote:
Nobody on here has yet proved this mythical government supporting big business - is the amount paid to supplement incomes of the lower paid higher or lower than the sum of NI, Corporation tax, Tax on Dividends combined? If its lower then the myth that government supports big business is just that a myth.


Off the top of my head:

• concentration on 'benefits scroungers' and refusal to do anything meaningful about tax avoidance/evasion by big corporates;

• creation of 'workfare' as a scheme that big businesses were able to use in order to lay off paid workers (IIRC, Asda being a particular culprit) and reluctance to do anything about it;

• continued privatisation – even to companies that have already screwed up more than once: G4S, for instance;

• reluctance – at best – to do anything meaningful in terms of banking regulation, and continued efforts to pretend that big finance was not behind the recession;

• fracking – with added financial benefits to companies to get involved.

And so on.

Edited to add the following: it's a read, but here's another quite specific one – big business and public health.
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Re: Proof the "Trickle Down" effect is a myth? : Sun Jan 26, 2014 12:01 pm  
Sal Paradise wrote:
Nobody on here has yet proved this mythical government supporting big business - is the amount paid to supplement incomes of the lower paid higher or lower than the sum of NI, Corporation tax, Tax on Dividends combined? If its lower then the myth that government supports big business is just that a myth.


Taxes on the business profits are irrelevant to the argument on direct taxation on wages, you may as well argue that a busy business pays more tax on fuel for their deliveries, more VAT on the supplies of paperwork they generate etc, its peripheral but not relevant.

If you want to see what Working Tax Credits and Child Tax Credits for working people can amount to then here's a link http://www.hmrc.gov.uk/taxcredits/payments-entitlement/entitlement/how-worked-out.htm these are maximum figures of course and dependant on qualifying circumstances but as you can see they are not small amounts and frankly they shouldn't be because they were designed to make it preferable for the unemployed to find SOME work rather than NO work, designed to make it more profitable to get off the unemployed register than to remain on it.

I'm sure you'll understand from those figures what the potential level of subsidy to employment is for an employer, it may not happen in your business sector but I do know for a fact that in the world of low minimum hours contracts in the hotel industry its normal for an employee to state at the time of job application that they are "only looking for 16 hours" or 20 hours, or whatever the tax break figure is that year and it suits both employer and employee for there is a big drop-off in credits when you work above the specified figure.

It also suits the government of the day of course for two people splitting 32 hours a week between them is the main measure of their policy success, no-one ever asks "Ah but how much do you pay out in tax subsidies", more "look at the employment figures dropping, we must be successful"
Sal Paradise wrote:
Nobody on here has yet proved this mythical government supporting big business - is the amount paid to supplement incomes of the lower paid higher or lower than the sum of NI, Corporation tax, Tax on Dividends combined? If its lower then the myth that government supports big business is just that a myth.


Taxes on the business profits are irrelevant to the argument on direct taxation on wages, you may as well argue that a busy business pays more tax on fuel for their deliveries, more VAT on the supplies of paperwork they generate etc, its peripheral but not relevant.

If you want to see what Working Tax Credits and Child Tax Credits for working people can amount to then here's a link http://www.hmrc.gov.uk/taxcredits/payments-entitlement/entitlement/how-worked-out.htm these are maximum figures of course and dependant on qualifying circumstances but as you can see they are not small amounts and frankly they shouldn't be because they were designed to make it preferable for the unemployed to find SOME work rather than NO work, designed to make it more profitable to get off the unemployed register than to remain on it.

I'm sure you'll understand from those figures what the potential level of subsidy to employment is for an employer, it may not happen in your business sector but I do know for a fact that in the world of low minimum hours contracts in the hotel industry its normal for an employee to state at the time of job application that they are "only looking for 16 hours" or 20 hours, or whatever the tax break figure is that year and it suits both employer and employee for there is a big drop-off in credits when you work above the specified figure.

It also suits the government of the day of course for two people splitting 32 hours a week between them is the main measure of their policy success, no-one ever asks "Ah but how much do you pay out in tax subsidies", more "look at the employment figures dropping, we must be successful"
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Re: Proof the "Trickle Down" effect is a myth? : Sun Jan 26, 2014 1:16 pm  
Mintball wrote:
I think that you're conflating things.

It would be factually correct that some people, in the UK, today, feel that fairness and equality are "forced" on them. The B&B business where the owner doesn't like gays.

They want to be able to run a business where they can refuse to serve customers on the basis of an individual belief about an entire group.

As Jerry has pointed out in the past, this is no different from the 'no blacks or dogs' signs of a few decades ago.

Change to something fairer and more equal was forced on people by law.

What sort of percentage of the population today would really think that being able to post such signs again would be acceptable?

The point is that we can – in the UK – occasions of greater fairness and equality being created by, one might say, legal "force". And the majority accept it and move on – move forward.

An idea of equality/fairness is not the sole preserve of the USSR or the Eastern Bloc.

Indeed, if this country (and others) had not made many other moves forward, and changes to law etc over the centuries, where do you think we would be today?

Those doing the foodbank work at the point of handing it out don't just give it to anyone who walks through the doors. Much of the increase in foodbank use is down to falling wages (and hours – underemployment, in other words) combined with the rising cost of living.

Huge numbers of those using foodbanks are in work.

On those living on the streets, this has been rising for years. It's been shown over the years to include many ex-service personnel who can find it very difficult to fit back into civilian life. There is also a long-term issue of not enough safe, residential care for people with mental illnesses.

Only this morning I spotted a story about numbers of children locked in police cells for exactly the same reason. Story.

A number of points here, but I'll stick with just two:

• what is the "lifestyle as if you were working", when we have working people needing benefits and using foodbanks?

• I don't think anyone has denied that there are pîsstakers out there. But until there is a job for everyone man and woman of working age, then politicians demanding that such people are forced into work is ridiculous. There are not enough jobs for the willing let alone the unwilling, who I'd suggest they far outnumber. Indeed, as the BoE boss has now acknowledged, there are masses of people who are in some work, but cannot get enough to meet their own needs. The entire business about the 'scroungers' is a deflection. Similarly with getting the disabled into work when there are not enough jobs to go around – and not least when the same government scraps Remploy.

Well, I'm not going to have a go at your ethics – I never have: just your previous apparent refusal to discuss ethics in any terms other than what you perceive to be mine, which you have had more the odd dig at, remember. :)

As I've said before, it's difficult to be as ethical as one might wish in 'the real world', but where possible, I try.

It would be part of what I'd ideally do, although in terms of day-to-day work, sub-editing is probably one of my favourite aspects – I like the geekiness of solving layout puzzles, for instance, and doing (some of) the photography that I do.

And again, I'd say that much of what we take for granted today had to be worked for in the past and would have been resented by some at the time.

Equally, to reiterate: to talk of society being 'fairer' is not to talk of, for instance, everyone being on the same pay.

I'm not entirely sure I'm getting what you mean here, but if I do ...

To clarify, most people with a child will receive child benefit.

Otherwise, this seems to be returning to the issue of a situation where (some) businesses are happy for the taxpayer to pay subsidise them. That – and the cost of living in general and housing in particular.

Just to take this one a little further (and again, it's been discussed before).

We have a shortage of housing, which is a factor in further driving up the costs of housing to what some people are suggesting is dangerous in terms of yet another bubble, and what others certainly see as unsustainable.

If you were to embark on a massive council house building/refurbishment programme you could, in the slightly longer term, deal with the housing shortage. It would also mean that many people would no longer need housing benefit or possibly even other in-work benefits, because their own pay might stretch further.

In the process, you'd create jobs in order to build or refurbish those homes, therefore taking at least some people out of unemployment (or underemployment) and thus cutting benefit costs. Indeed, if they're paid a decent wage, they then start paying tax and NI. They also have money to spend in local economies – at the pub, watching RL, at the cinema or the local restaurant. We know where that goes – more job creation etc. And all that is good for the national economy.

To repeat: nobody that I can see is suggesting that everyone should be paid X sum, regardless of the work that they do.

But a fairer society is possible and, even at the most pragmatic level, since it would benefit the majority of individuals and the country as a whole, would seem to be a worthwhile and sensible aim.

The situation we have at the moment, on the other hand, is unsustainable. Endlessly rising housing costs at the same time that many jobs are continuing to be cut – it's not just new jobs that have limited or zero-contract hours, but many existing jobs are being reduced.

That's one of the factors that is hampering local economies and the national one.


Some really interesting points much of I actually agree with - I think you are misunderstanding me or being deliberately obtuse. The point about equality is people don't like it forced upon them, they don't want the opportunity to succeed and reap the rewards of that success taken away because of an ideology that doesn't allow it. That is a world away from 'No whites served here' as we had in Bradford during the last petrol tankers dispute.

My idea of fairness/equality is access to opportunity - in this country there are very limited barriers to starting your own business. Anyone from any walk of life can do it they just need the drive and persistence to see it through. What I struggle with is the envy to those who take the plunge and risk it all from those without the balls.

Housing is an interesting one - I think we all agree there is a need for more housing, the question that needs answering, is the lack of housing a reflection of the inability of potential buyer to access the funds to complete the purchase?
Mintball wrote:
I think that you're conflating things.

It would be factually correct that some people, in the UK, today, feel that fairness and equality are "forced" on them. The B&B business where the owner doesn't like gays.

They want to be able to run a business where they can refuse to serve customers on the basis of an individual belief about an entire group.

As Jerry has pointed out in the past, this is no different from the 'no blacks or dogs' signs of a few decades ago.

Change to something fairer and more equal was forced on people by law.

What sort of percentage of the population today would really think that being able to post such signs again would be acceptable?

The point is that we can – in the UK – occasions of greater fairness and equality being created by, one might say, legal "force". And the majority accept it and move on – move forward.

An idea of equality/fairness is not the sole preserve of the USSR or the Eastern Bloc.

Indeed, if this country (and others) had not made many other moves forward, and changes to law etc over the centuries, where do you think we would be today?

Those doing the foodbank work at the point of handing it out don't just give it to anyone who walks through the doors. Much of the increase in foodbank use is down to falling wages (and hours – underemployment, in other words) combined with the rising cost of living.

Huge numbers of those using foodbanks are in work.

On those living on the streets, this has been rising for years. It's been shown over the years to include many ex-service personnel who can find it very difficult to fit back into civilian life. There is also a long-term issue of not enough safe, residential care for people with mental illnesses.

Only this morning I spotted a story about numbers of children locked in police cells for exactly the same reason. Story.

A number of points here, but I'll stick with just two:

• what is the "lifestyle as if you were working", when we have working people needing benefits and using foodbanks?

• I don't think anyone has denied that there are pîsstakers out there. But until there is a job for everyone man and woman of working age, then politicians demanding that such people are forced into work is ridiculous. There are not enough jobs for the willing let alone the unwilling, who I'd suggest they far outnumber. Indeed, as the BoE boss has now acknowledged, there are masses of people who are in some work, but cannot get enough to meet their own needs. The entire business about the 'scroungers' is a deflection. Similarly with getting the disabled into work when there are not enough jobs to go around – and not least when the same government scraps Remploy.

Well, I'm not going to have a go at your ethics – I never have: just your previous apparent refusal to discuss ethics in any terms other than what you perceive to be mine, which you have had more the odd dig at, remember. :)

As I've said before, it's difficult to be as ethical as one might wish in 'the real world', but where possible, I try.

It would be part of what I'd ideally do, although in terms of day-to-day work, sub-editing is probably one of my favourite aspects – I like the geekiness of solving layout puzzles, for instance, and doing (some of) the photography that I do.

And again, I'd say that much of what we take for granted today had to be worked for in the past and would have been resented by some at the time.

Equally, to reiterate: to talk of society being 'fairer' is not to talk of, for instance, everyone being on the same pay.

I'm not entirely sure I'm getting what you mean here, but if I do ...

To clarify, most people with a child will receive child benefit.

Otherwise, this seems to be returning to the issue of a situation where (some) businesses are happy for the taxpayer to pay subsidise them. That – and the cost of living in general and housing in particular.

Just to take this one a little further (and again, it's been discussed before).

We have a shortage of housing, which is a factor in further driving up the costs of housing to what some people are suggesting is dangerous in terms of yet another bubble, and what others certainly see as unsustainable.

If you were to embark on a massive council house building/refurbishment programme you could, in the slightly longer term, deal with the housing shortage. It would also mean that many people would no longer need housing benefit or possibly even other in-work benefits, because their own pay might stretch further.

In the process, you'd create jobs in order to build or refurbish those homes, therefore taking at least some people out of unemployment (or underemployment) and thus cutting benefit costs. Indeed, if they're paid a decent wage, they then start paying tax and NI. They also have money to spend in local economies – at the pub, watching RL, at the cinema or the local restaurant. We know where that goes – more job creation etc. And all that is good for the national economy.

To repeat: nobody that I can see is suggesting that everyone should be paid X sum, regardless of the work that they do.

But a fairer society is possible and, even at the most pragmatic level, since it would benefit the majority of individuals and the country as a whole, would seem to be a worthwhile and sensible aim.

The situation we have at the moment, on the other hand, is unsustainable. Endlessly rising housing costs at the same time that many jobs are continuing to be cut – it's not just new jobs that have limited or zero-contract hours, but many existing jobs are being reduced.

That's one of the factors that is hampering local economies and the national one.


Some really interesting points much of I actually agree with - I think you are misunderstanding me or being deliberately obtuse. The point about equality is people don't like it forced upon them, they don't want the opportunity to succeed and reap the rewards of that success taken away because of an ideology that doesn't allow it. That is a world away from 'No whites served here' as we had in Bradford during the last petrol tankers dispute.

My idea of fairness/equality is access to opportunity - in this country there are very limited barriers to starting your own business. Anyone from any walk of life can do it they just need the drive and persistence to see it through. What I struggle with is the envy to those who take the plunge and risk it all from those without the balls.

Housing is an interesting one - I think we all agree there is a need for more housing, the question that needs answering, is the lack of housing a reflection of the inability of potential buyer to access the funds to complete the purchase?
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