Originally posted by henryhooverville
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Previously on "How does the Tory government help the man in the street?"
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Originally posted by NigelJK View PostYou're making a common mistake, there are fundamental differences between skills and academia... If you wish to nurture a skill set then the workplace is the best place to pick them up. Very few companies in this country... cannot afford to carry a graduate whilst they accumulate those skills. Their learning is not aimed at that outcome, it's aimed at an academic career.
There are a whole host of careers (mostly dependant on learning on the job) which fulfil this slot.
But consider this: if I wanted to do a degree in Physics but couldn't get into the top uni because my primary school, secondary school and sixth form were broadly underfunded, understaffed, etc. that'd be awkward. If people don't fullfill their natural potential wherever they are that's a real shame. And it costs money.
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Originally posted by LondonManc View Postif that's the case, why is it that Labour are the champions of a narrow bell curve where everyone passes but nobody excels?
Thankfully Labour leaders are the dumber ones and they well and truly clear of government.
But I think it's unfair to say nobody excels, I am sure some kids around my age are doing well. The good thing about the university fees is that there is more money to invest at that level, though at primary and secondary level more could be done (though that will probably be true forever!)
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Originally posted by LondonManc View Postif that's the case, why is it that Labour are the champions of a narrow bell curve where everyone passes but nobody excels?
Oh dear...... maybe I got the word "curve" mixed up with the word "end"
Easily done, as you were
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Originally posted by henryhooverville View PostIt's a well researched book, and Danny Dorling is foremost in his field. But it is reflecting on numbers more than anything.
If you can spare a tenner and six hours give it a read, if economics is your jive.
On the issue of the young, my old Sixth Form has about a quarter less funding than before 2015 and funding for 19 years olds is cut. The conservatives don't like a skills-based economy, and that's bad for employers and decreases potential economic growth over the next few decades.
Education, Education, Education... as out titans recite but there isn't really a solution to that.
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Originally posted by Platypus View PostHere's one I thought of,
Raising the Tax Free Allowance and increasing the Min. Wage.
Oh wait they did if I recall correctly!
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Originally posted by Platypus View PostHow does the Tory government help the man in the street?.
Originally posted by Platypus View Post...But the government, here and now, is what my question was about. Interesting so far that no-one can think of anything of substance, rather than they are "less bad than the alternative"...
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Go to page 24: http://sticerd.lse.ac.uk/dps/case/spcc/WP13.pdf using the data here only in 2014 did the level return to pre-recession levels but FE funding has dropped sharply, and real spending has also dropped.
The Apprenticeship programme may offset this as you have 3 million new ones (pre-brexit target) but you have to consider they are only now getting to degree equivalent levels (which is a good thing). But I see the apprenticeship program as a Lib Dem policy in terms of 2010 government. The apprenticeship levy will fund this so businesses are paying for their own apprentices in effect. It's wasn't dreamt up by the Conservatives and kudos to them for keeping this policy.
Furthermore the increase in university tuition fees puts a lot of debt on students, it means universities have more funding and have to allocate more of that funding for poorer students; whether this actually happens is another matter. I have spoken to Diane Reay at Cambridge and she bemoans that while Cambridge University has really brilliant bursaries they are rarely cashed as the predominantly rich students aren't eligible to claim them, nor are international students. That means they lose a lot of budding talent.
If you want to say that the Conservatives are building a resilient skills-based economy, I'd ask besides apprenticeships what's resilient?
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Here's one I thought of,
Raising the Tax Free Allowance and increasing the Min. Wage.
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Originally posted by NigelJK View PostBack this up with some facts dude.
The Apprenticeship programme may offset this as you have 3 million new ones (pre-brexit target) but you have to consider they are only now getting to degree equivalent levels (which is a good thing). But I see the apprenticeship program as a Lib Dem policy in terms of 2010 government. The apprenticeship levy will fund this so businesses are paying for their own apprentices in effect. It's wasn't dreamt up by the Conservatives and kudos to them for keeping this policy.
Furthermore the increase in university tuition fees puts a lot of debt on students, it means universities have more funding and have to allocate more of that funding for poorer students; whether this actually happens is another matter. I have spoken to Diane Reay at Cambridge and she bemoans that while Cambridge University has really brilliant bursaries they are rarely cashed as the predominantly rich students aren't eligible to claim them, nor are international students. That means they lose a lot of budding talent.
Also consider this debt is guaranteed by subsequent governments, so either way they pay the debt it's just that with student loans you pay interest on top as well. Talk about fiddling the books.
If you want a skills-based economy which grows exponentially, you don't privatize all your schools and shove the cost of schooling onto future gorvernments. With soverign debt at about 80% I think (How large is the UK’s national debt, and why does it matter?) and 95% being the typical oh tulip moment, unless GDP grows at a faster pace than your debt there's a problem. In the long term it is more expensive, and education is long term - consider the teacher shortages (Ministers 'have no plan to address teacher shortages' - BBC News) which mean worse results as years go by across primary and secondary schools.
If you want to say that the Conservatives are building a resilient skills-based economy, I'd ask besides apprenticeships what's resilient? What happens if there's another recession? Why all the manufactured debt? I really don't see it, it's the lesser of two evils and you don't need that in education.
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Originally posted by AtW View PostMillipede would have been better, sad but true.
He'd get 50% tax back, but that would still be less than dividend hike by fooking Cons.
Also we were talking about the man on the street. Which is not contractors on £400/day struggling how to avoid paying HR tax
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