Stop taxing the poor so damn much
Given our greybeard status one of the things we’ve learnt is that bad policy, bad economics, keeps returning like the acid reflux after a bad curry.
What? Really? People change their behaviour because of taxes? Sirsly?
No, no, there must be some mistake here. We all know that people called upon to proffer up their mere fair share to the common weal don’t change their behaviour in order to dodge that righteous gifting.
Future living standards will be better
A reasonable way to predict future living standards in the UK is to look at what well-to-do people are doing today, and to suggest that more middle-of-the-road people will be doing that in future.
What is the fiscal end game?
On Wednesday, the Chancellor delivered her Spring Statement. Initially branded as an update on the UK’s fiscal situation, the statement had morphed into a quasi-budget in anticipation of the OBR’s Economic and Fiscal Outlook (EFO).
Oh Dear - The Civil Service doesn’t grasp Parkinson
Every government tries to hack back at the Civil Service. Given that every government does try to hack back the Civil Service then, according to the media aimed at the Civil Service, this proves that hacking at the Civil Service doesn’t work:
Growth is good
It is fashionable in some circles to stigmatize economic growth as ‘materialism,’ recklessly using up the planet’s allegedly scarce resources in a rat race to acquire ever more material goods.
It’s not the EU we’re against it’s the idea of the EU
Or, to be more exact and precise, this specific idea of the European Union that strikes us as wrong:
A modern-day Domesday Book
Just as the quantity theory of money factors in the velocity as well as the supply of money, we might apply the same principle to the housing market. The velocity of housing transactions is notoriously slow.
Are these people actively mad?
Could be, could be: Gatwick airport is preparing to reject government demands for it to guarantee that the majority of passengers using its proposed new runway will arrive by train.
Why capitalism works best
Capitalism was not invented. It developed out of the ways in which people deal with each other, and is one of the most benign things that people have done
Jason Hickel seems to think this is a criticism
Hickel writes: What's striking about capitalist civilization is that it has no real direction. There's no vision for social progress, no commitment to improving human welfare or ecology. All we get is the chaos of profit-oriented production and accumulation as the world burns around us.