• Visitors can check out the Forum FAQ by clicking this link. You have to register before you can post: click the REGISTER link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. View our Forum Privacy Policy.
  • Want to receive the latest contracting news and advice straight to your inbox? Sign up to the ContractorUK newsletter here. Every sign up will also be entered into a draw to WIN £100 Amazon vouchers!

UK one of the most unequal countries

Collapse
X
  •  
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    #21
    Originally posted by scooterscot View Post
    The UK is not a place where people live. Come on. It's a place where people live to work.
    The South-East maybe, other parts definitely not. What is odd, given how awful people purport the UK to be, there's no shortage of people who seem more than happy to turn up.

    Comment


      #22
      Originally posted by scooterscot View Post
      The UK is not a place where people live. Come on. It's a place where people live to work.
      Maybe the parts of the UK that YOU have lived in. I have lived in a variety of places across the UK and there are plenty of nice places. I have also lived in Germany.....and Poland.....and Belgium......and Italy.......and Cyprus......and Holland.....and Sweden.......and Ireland....and Lebanon...and India. And by "live" I don't mean a week or two holiday, I mean living and working for weeks, months, and even years on end.
      Most if not all had their pluses and minuses, but overall I still give Blighty the edge.
      Then again, maybe I am not an insecure prejudiced glass-half-empty fookwit like some?
      “The period of the disintegration of the European Union has begun. And the first vessel to have departed is Britain”

      Comment


        #23
        Originally posted by shaunbhoy View Post
        Maybe the parts of the UK that YOU have lived in. I have lived in a variety of places across the UK and there are plenty of nice places. I have also lived in Germany.....and Poland.....and Belgium......and Italy.......and Cyprus......and Holland.....and Sweden.......and Ireland....and Lebanon...and India. And by "live" I don't mean a week or two holiday, I mean living and working for weeks, months, and even years on end.
        Most if not all had their pluses and minuses, but overall I still give Blighty the edge.
        Then again, maybe I am not an insecure prejudiced glass-half-empty fookwit like some?
        Same here and we all knock it from time to time but there are things here that are just unparalleled anywhere else in the world.

        The countryside, public footpaths, the aesthetics of everyday objects e.g. postboxes, bus shelters (ok, so the modern ones are cr@p), the RNLI, rural pubs, unarmed police and loads more.

        These are all things I've missed whilst living abroad. Even the weather; when you're somewhere where the weather varies between 30 & 50 degrees c, you don't half long for a damp, stormy autumnal day.

        Comment


          #24
          Originally posted by scooterscot View Post
          In Germany they have:

          Free university,
          Free national travel for students,
          Excellent technical colleges,
          As much respect given to those who enter trades,
          Apprenticeships that pay €10 an hour, not less than £3,
          Workfare that's paid employment,
          Non judgmental welfare system,
          Excellent social housing,
          Rent protection and security of tenure for tenants,
          Little in the way of zero hours, minimum hours style employment..

          WHAT's OUR EXCUSE?!!

          I do find these sorts of differences very interesting.

          Why the difference? I'll make a broad assumption that human beings are equally capable wherever they are born. There is no innate superiority in any group.


          First of all, from looking at your list, there is no such thing as "Free". They don't have "Free" university or travel in Germany ( or anywhere else ) some,somewhere, is paying for the right of your child to go to University or to travel on the train. It's just that the cost is hidden within general taxation.

          So it is not that we cannot have free uni or travel. But that we don't prioritise it against other Government spending.

          Again I'll make an assumption that the overall tax-take in the UK compared to Germany is roughly the same ( about 30% of GDP ).

          So where does the UK deploy it's resources? One thing that really stands out to me is that the UK spends $55B ( 2% of GDP ) per year on defence as apposed to only $40B ( 1.2% of GDP ) by Germany.

          We really overspend on our armed forces given the size and easy defensibility of the UK and the few remaining overseas territories. Simply by scaling back our spending to the same amount as Germany we'd have £10B per year "spare" to spend on infrastructure or education. That would soon mount up. £100B extra on infrastructure each decade.

          Likewise if Germany increased it's spending it would need to find an extra 40 - 50B per year. Which of course they could do, but would mean either increasing borrowing, raising taxes or reducing benefits. Or, more likely, a mix of all 3.


          Secondly regarding uni, free travel, housing and education. I think demographics plays a lot into this. For years Germany has had a declining population. So it is cheaper to provide these resources "for free". You don't need to build so many houses if your population is falling. Plus they have more physical space, which makes it easier and cheaper to build new stuff.

          As an aside. It always makes me wonder : If Germany is so great for children, why aren't they having any? ( not sure if you can answer that one ).


          From the rest or your list:

          "Workfare that's paid employment" - that's been raised in the UK before but rejected. It's essentially getting unemployed people to work for their benefits. Which sounds good to some, but it's exploitative and undermines other people doing a similar job.

          "Non judgmental welfare system" - not sure that's a good thing. Surely a welfare system should judge in order to allocate resources to those who need them most? Obviously those judging need to be properly trained and regulated.


          "As much respect given to those who enter trades" - I'd agree. More focus on training and providing employment for non-academic people would be a good thing. Better to train and employ people as builders rather than importing builders and paying your own people to be on the dole.

          "Little in the way of zero hours, minimum hours style employment" - not sure this is a big deal. zero-hours contracts are only 3% of the UK workforce and there is a benefit to having them. It's very flexible, of course they can be abused by some employers but that's not to say they are entirely awful.

          Comment


            #25
            Originally posted by The Only Way Is Keynsham View Post
            Same here and we all knock it from time to time but there are things here that are just unparalleled anywhere else in the world.

            The countryside, public footpaths, the aesthetics of everyday objects e.g. postboxes, bus shelters (ok, so the modern ones are cr@p), the RNLI, rural pubs, unarmed police and loads more.

            These are all things I've missed whilst living abroad. Even the weather; when you're somewhere where the weather varies between 30 & 50 degrees c, you don't half long for a damp, stormy autumnal day.
            You've forgotten fold up bikes, trains etc. Martin
            The Chunt of Chunts.

            Comment


              #26
              Originally posted by tomtomagain View Post
              As an aside. It always makes me wonder : If Germany is so great for children, why aren't they having any? ( not sure if you can answer that one ).
              People leave it too late. They come out of education in their late twenties, start professional life in the early thirties. Before you know it that special someone comes along in the mid-thrities. Too late.

              Agree with defence. UK spends too much in this area (or gets ripped off through supply-chain, much of the same thing). The UK also spends far too much daily on debt interest payments.

              UK debt is ignored nearly all of the time by the media. What is GDP now, 91%? Compared to Germany's 76%? 15% might not sounds like a massive difference but explains much about how so many public services remain free rather than hidden in tax.
              "Never argue with stupid people, they will drag you down to their level and beat you with experience". Mark Twain

              Comment


                #27
                Originally posted by scooterscot View Post
                UK debt is ignored nearly all of the time by the media. What is GDP now, 91%? Compared to Germany's 76%? 15% might not sounds like a massive difference
                That is very true. the repayment cost is £8 in every £100 that the government spends.

                Comment


                  #28
                  Originally posted by The Only Way Is Keynsham View Post
                  Same here and we all knock it from time to time but there are things here that are just unparalleled anywhere else in the world.

                  The countryside, public footpaths, the aesthetics of everyday objects e.g. postboxes, bus shelters (ok, so the modern ones are cr@p), the RNLI, rural pubs, unarmed police and loads more.

                  These are all things I've missed whilst living abroad. Even the weather; when you're somewhere where the weather varies between 30 & 50 degrees c, you don't half long for a damp, stormy autumnal day.
                  I should also like to add canals and narrowboats.

                  Had a lovely drive back tonight along the A4 through Hungerford and Marlborough, windows down with Steely Dans' Aja blaring out.

                  Decided to pop into Great Bedwyn to see the huge steam beam engines that abstract the water that fills the flight of 26 locks at Caen Hill. Impressive stuff.

                  I then went for a pint of Summer Lightening at the Who'd A Thought It in Lockridge & to continue the evening's K&A theme, a spot of gongoozling clutching a pint of cloudy cider in the garden of the Barge Inn, Bradford On Avon before driving back home.

                  You see, you just can't have an evening like that in Germany. Though I'll give the Jerries one thing; they do camper vans much better than us and I say that as the former owner of a VW Westfalia T4.
                  Last edited by The Only Way Is Keynsham; 13 September 2016, 20:36.

                  Comment


                    #29
                    Originally posted by scooterscot View Post
                    People leave it too late. They come out of education in their late twenties, start professional life in the early thirties. Before you know it that special someone comes along in the mid-thrities. Too late.
                    Mid-30s isn't too late to have children - if it was plenty of people I know including myself wouldn't be here.

                    The fact is Germany is clearly not a parent friendly country. If it was German women would want to have and would have children.
                    "You’re just a bad memory who doesn’t know when to go away" JR

                    Comment


                      #30
                      Originally posted by The Only Way Is Keynsham View Post
                      I should also like to add canals and narrowboats.

                      Had a lovely drive back tonight along the A4 through Hungerford and Marlborough, windows down with Steely Dans' Aja blaring out.

                      Decided to pop into Great Bedwyn to see the huge steam beam engines that abstract the water that fills the flight of 26 locks at Caen Hill. Impressive stuff.

                      I then went for a pint of Summer Lightening at the Who'd A Thought It in Lockridge & to continue the evening's K&A theme, a spot of gongoozling clutching a pint of cloudy cider in the garden of the Barge Inn, Bradford On Avon before driving back home.

                      You see, you just can't have an evening like that in Germany. Though I'll give the Jerries one thing; they do camper vans much better than us and I say that as the former owner of a VW Westfalia T4.
                      Probably because they don't live in 'La-La Land'
                      Brexit is having a wee in the middle of the room at a house party because nobody is talking to you, and then complaining about the smell.

                      Comment

                      Working...
                      X