https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XK9doTm8CH8
― helpless before THRILLARY (Dr Morbius), Friday, 24 June 2016 15:07 (seven years ago) link
http://www.express.co.uk/news/uk/866946/brexit-latest-updates-ons-data-wipes-490-billion-uk-wealth
― Tom's Tits Experiment (Tom D.), Monday, 16 October 2017 09:34 (six years ago) link
Can someone please have a look at this post and thoroughly debunk it (or otherwise)? Pretty please. Yours, an economics idiot
http://forum.charltonlife.com/discussion/comment/2994686/#Comment_2994686
― imago, Tuesday, 31 October 2017 12:17 (six years ago) link
Just looking at Wikipedia, the China-Australia deal took a decade, not 13 months, so that guy’s nuts
― El Tomboto, Tuesday, 31 October 2017 12:31 (six years ago) link
And the Walloons held firm against the EU-Canada agreement for a whole... two weeks, just looking at the google news headlines.
― El Tomboto, Tuesday, 31 October 2017 12:34 (six years ago) link
The old “throwing out easily disprovable ‘facts’ in a barrage because there’s no referee so just try and prove me wrong” school
― El Tomboto, Tuesday, 31 October 2017 12:37 (six years ago) link
guess the old 'we can be like singapore' line is p raving mad too
― imago, Tuesday, 31 October 2017 12:49 (six years ago) link
i dunno, a lot of Tories are into corporal punishment
― Pope Urban the Legend (Noodle Vague), Tuesday, 31 October 2017 12:51 (six years ago) link
I feel that in a normal year this type of thing might be bigger news.
BBC News - Interserve rescue plan prompts share collapsehttp://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-46505688
No mention of the half a million+ they paid their CEO in April. But at least the million shares they also gave her are now worth less so that's something?
― Ned Trifle X, Monday, 10 December 2018 09:48 (five years ago) link
shit-bin-manufacturing-relocating-to-eire
― gabbnebulous (darraghmac), Sunday, 16 December 2018 18:52 (five years ago) link
https://www.theguardian.com/business/2022/jun/18/we-face-a-global-economic-crisis-and-no-one-knows-what-to-do-about-it
We know that an increase in the cost of borrowing in the UK, the eurozone and the US, which is what we are now witnessing, will do nothing to bring down prices.Inflation is an affliction caused by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, and to a lesser but important extent by China’s difficulties with Covid after its vaccine development failures, which have caused repeated lockdowns and holdups at ports. In the UK, Brexit adds a further big twist because it has damaged trade and cut the number of available workers.The justification for higher interest rates, then, must lie elsewhere, and central banks, to justify their spasm of action, argue they must go ahead to avert a wages spiral – one where pay exceeds inflation.In Britain, this argument presumes that the average worker, to prevent a fall in personal living standards, will be able to negotiate a pay deal that beats the Bank of England’s latest forecast for peak inflation later this year of 11%.When the government is expected to limit public sector pay rises to between 0% and 3% this year, that means private sector increases would have to be even higher – about 12% or 13% on average. These levels of pay rise are a fiction.
― Tracer Hand, Saturday, 18 June 2022 21:43 (one year ago) link
Oof
I literally did not believe this when it was first explained to me, but the UK effectively puts housing prices in the CPI for student loan interest, so anyone with a student loan is levered synthetic short housing as well needing to rent. It's shocking their TFR isn't 0. https://t.co/Z6tkux9mQA— Quantian (@quantian1) August 3, 2022
― 𝔠𝔞𝔢𝔨 (caek), Wednesday, 3 August 2022 14:08 (one year ago) link
this thread is key reading imo:
The Bank of England’s going to increase interest rates today. It may be by 0.25%. It could be by 0.5%. But the question is, why are they choosing to increase the price of money when we already have an inflation problem? A thread to explain…..— Richard Murphy (@RichardJMurphy) August 4, 2022
― Tracer Hand, Friday, 5 August 2022 14:45 (one year ago) link
it’s almost as if “cooling” (sunak) vs “stimulating” the economy (truss) is too simplistic a way to think about this quite grim challenge of profiteering, war and chronic underinvestment
― Tracer Hand, Friday, 5 August 2022 16:49 (one year ago) link
Bump
― 𝔠𝔞𝔢𝔨 (caek), Monday, 26 September 2022 02:14 (one year ago) link
negative growth in last 3 months blamed on... the extra bank holiday and not the fuckwittery of the truss government.
Christmas and a world cup in the next quarter though.
― koogs, Saturday, 12 November 2022 12:30 (one year ago) link
food inflation now running at 19%. not a typo.
― Tracer Hand, Tuesday, 2 May 2023 12:25 (ten months ago) link