Originally posted by jbond007
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Jeremy Corbyn
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Originally posted by AtW View PostAs long as he does not bring back those trains where you had to open window, and bend over to open from the outside!
The regulations are actually EEA wide so nothing to do with the EU."You’re just a bad memory who doesn’t know when to go away" JRComment
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Originally posted by expat View PostActually the trains cost taxpayers less when they were nationalised. So tell me why I as a taxpayer should now pay 4 times more for them to be private and make a profit for their owners?
It's actually a con.
Rail commuters actually pay more of their ticket price than when the trains where nationalised.
The state subsidiary is actually higher than when the trains where nationalised.
The last Tory government purposely decreased the subsidiary before privatisation.
So all together the railway is getting more money."You’re just a bad memory who doesn’t know when to go away" JRComment
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Originally posted by SueEllen View PostThey changed the rate of subsidiary
It's actually a con.
Rail commuters actually pay more of their ticket price than when the trains where nationalised.
The state subsidiary is actually higher than when the trains where nationalised.
The last Tory government purposely decreased the subsidiary before privatisation.
So all together the railway is getting more money.Comment
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We need more of this. Network FAIL: Britain's rail services are officially 'tulip' says Sir Peter Hendy | Metro News
And while we are at it why not extend this wonderful notion of nationalisation further
Boehner Denounces FCCLet us not forget EU open doors immigration benefits IT contractors more than anyoneComment
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Originally posted by SueEllen View PostThey are banned by European health and Safety regulations.
The regulations are actually EEA wide so nothing to do with the EU.Comment
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I have just visited his home planet and pick up a load of Green Corbynite. I'll make a fortune on ebay selling it to Interstellar villains and Blairites(\__/)
(>'.'<)
("")("") Born to Drink. Forced to WorkComment
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More than 40 leading economists, including a former adviser to the Bank of England, have made public their support for Jeremy Corbyn’s policies, dismissing claims that they are extreme, in a major boost to the leftwinger’s campaign to be leader.
This after the FT gave one of Corbyn's key ideas the thumbs-up...
If Corbyn’s preferred investments are useful, they could help restore some of the lost ground in productivity and lead to higher real wages for Britons. And by expanding capacity, this extra investment spending may not even end up being inflationary. (The actual amounts in question, according to Murphy, are quite small relative to the size of the UK economy.)
“People’s QE” is far from an obviously wrong idea. Implemented properly, it could even improve the Bank of England’s ability to fulfill its mandate without needing to goose house prices or get into contentious debates about helping the rich at the expense of pensioners.My subconscious is annoying. It's got a mind of its own.Comment
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Gotta love the vagueness of it all. Undefined terms, unspecified mechanisms, vague allusions to "investment" and "expanding capacity", mostly the product of the abortive disconnect between micro and macroeconomics.Last edited by Zero Liability; 23 August 2015, 15:32.Comment
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Originally posted by Zero Liability View PostGotta love the vagueness of it all. Undefined terms, unspecified mechanisms, vague allusions to "investment" and "expanding capacity", mostly the product of the abortive disconnect between micro and macroeconomics."Being nice costs nothing and sometimes gets you extra bacon" - Pondlife.Comment
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