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State of the Market
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Originally posted by edison View Post
SNIP
The FT did an interesting analysis comparing several economies and what effect excluding the richest region would have on GDP per capita. The comparatively outsized dominance of London was startling. The rest of the UK has an average GDP per capita lower than almost every single US state, just on a par with Mississippi. Which illustrates why so much of the UK’s economic prospects seem bleak.Comment
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Originally posted by willendure View Post[...]Its really about shedding some of the work force without having to resort to explicit layoffs - some people will not like it and will voluntarily leave. Those that stay, will be the ones most committed.[...]Comment
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Originally posted by willendure View Post
Consider the recent announcement by Amazon that all workers are to return to the office full time. Is it really because they think that improves productivity? Studies have shown that flexible working is good for productivity. Its really about shedding some of the work force without having to resort to explicit layoffs - some people will not like it and will voluntarily leave. Those that stay, will be the ones most committed.
This is unsurprising to me as Apple has / had a return-to-the-office full time policy for awhie. I agree it is a power move, because they think that the "great resignation" (USA phenomenon 2021/2022) is well and truly over. Will other lesser famed businesses follow suit? Well probably not., because a good CEO would hold off any such plans for a 1 or 2 years. "Hey Amazon Person. Come and work for us! We are flexible." There will be Hot Talent, but whether these lesser business can cope with the wage demands of the exiters will be another matter.Comment
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Originally posted by edison View PostThe FT did an interesting analysis comparing several economies and what effect excluding the richest region would have on GDP per capita. The comparatively outsized dominance of London was startling. The rest of the UK has an average GDP per capita lower than almost every single US state, just on a par with Mississippi. Which illustrates why so much of the UK’s economic prospects seem bleak.
We have one huge economic centre in a mega-city, and the rest of it is just a few cities a fraction the size of London and a lot of (relatively) low value industries spread across a large hinterland.
Even the breadth of infrastructure across greater London is miles ahead of what exists in the rest of the country.
I'd hoped the Tories would move the seat of government to the midlands or the north, and turn Westminster and the HoL into tourist attractions, but sadly that never materialised. There's no chance of Labour ever going down that road.
I think the move towards remote and hybrid working since COVID has improved the imbalance somewhat, but that's just a subjective observation based on the changes I can see in the NW region that I live in.Comment
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Originally posted by sreed View Post
I'd hoped the Tories would move the seat of government to the midlands or the north, and turn Westminster and the HoL into tourist attractions, but sadly that never materialised. There's no chance of Labour ever going down that road.
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Originally posted by SpliterOfLogs View PostWhy on earth did you think the Tories would do that?Comment
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Originally posted by SpliterOfLogs View Post
Why on earth did you think the Tories would do that?
Personally I've argued it should move to Bradford because that would result in both HS2 and NPR being built instantly...merely at clientco for the entertainmentComment
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There's precedent for the "seat of power" to not be where the major economic or tourist activity happens. The Palace of Westminster is falling apart and instead of being sensible about moving out to another location to allow repairs, successive parliaments (both chambers) have just stalled and nit picked over their own self-interests. The bill gets higher with every passing year they delay doing anything substantive about it.Comment
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