required field
- 03 Feb 2016 10:00
Thought I'd start a new thread as this is going to be a major talking point this year...have not made up my mind yet...(unlike bucksfizz)....but thinking of voting for an exit as Europe is not doing Britain any good at all it seems....
Stan
- 11 Feb 2019 10:53
- 12434 of 12628
What for the last 6 years? you can do better then that.
Martini
- 11 Feb 2019 10:57
- 12435 of 12628
Hils
Hmm bit like being asked if I want to be electrocuted by AC or DC.
I don,t like either but Mays deal edges it as I can’t do a Fred and not vote for anything. If only to stop stay.
cynic
- 11 Feb 2019 11:24
- 12436 of 12628
stan - i have no need to do any more ..... if you want to research for your own benefit or curiosity, then do so
Fred1new
- 11 Feb 2019 11:33
- 12437 of 12628
Stan,
Manuel bends with the wind.
For all is bluster he should have been nicknamed Mainwaring.
Dil
- 11 Feb 2019 11:38
- 12438 of 12628
We are fast approaching 1000 hours to go and still the Brexit train rolls on despite the moans of a few.
Choo choo.
Fred1new
- 11 Feb 2019 11:45
- 12439 of 12628
Here is an interesting short summary :
I’ve covered nine financial crises since the 1960s. Here’s what I learned
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2019/feb/09/william-keegan-nine-british-financial-crises-since-1967
Which party has made the biggest botch-ups for their political parties and careers?
Stan
- 11 Feb 2019 12:05
- 12440 of 12628
A good read that Fred but doubt the Outsiders will read it.
Dil
- 11 Feb 2019 12:37
- 12441 of 12628
Your right Stan .... a first :-)
cynic
- 11 Feb 2019 12:49
- 12442 of 12628
in that case, fred must be ARP Warden Hodges
KidA
- 11 Feb 2019 14:45
- 12443 of 12628
cynic [Send an email to cynic] [View cynic's profile] - 09 Feb 2019 09:29 - 12408 of 12442
when the (protestant) huguenots were hounded out of france at the end of 17th century, they brought silk spinning and weaving skills to spitalfields (london) ...
---
The Huguenots, the Irish, and master weavers, fun times in Spitalfields.
Cheers,
KidA
cynic
- 11 Feb 2019 14:50
- 12444 of 12628
what is the connection between the irish and spitalfields?
hilary
- 11 Feb 2019 15:09
- 12445 of 12628
Household incomes have taken a £1,500 hit since the EU referendum.
The UK has experienced the sharpest slowdown in income growth of any comparable economy according to the Resolution Foundation study.
Higher than expected inflation has also contributed to households’ spending power falling far below forecasts from before the 2016 European Union referendum.
The combination meant households had £1,500 less disposable income on average than they would have had under the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) pre-referendum forecast.
The report came out as official GDP figures are expected to show the UK economy at the end of 2018 was 1.1% - some £23 billion - smaller than the OBR pre-referendum forecast in March 2016, the think tank said.
That figure is equivalent to £800 for every household in the UK.
KidA
- 11 Feb 2019 15:10
- 12446 of 12628
cynic [Send an email to cynic] [View cynic's profile] - 11 Feb 2019 14:50 - 12444 of 12446
what is the connection between the irish and spitalfields?
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Spitalfield riots in the 1760s. New group of weavers begins to settle, employers happy to pay less, friction, riots. Sound familiar? Obviously, the employers would say the increased numbers did not affect pay.
Cheers,
KidA
cynic
- 11 Feb 2019 15:22
- 12447 of 12628
thanks KidA ........ as below
Spitalfields had been a centre of the silk-weaving industry since the early seventeenth century. Towards the end of the century, at the time when the Huguenots arrived from France, large numbers of Huguenot silk-weavers settled in the district. During the 1760s, there were still many weavers in Spitalfields whose French surnames showed their Huguenot descent. Irish weavers came slightly later, but by the middle of the 1730s there were many people from Ireland, or of Irish origins, working in the Spitalfields silk industry.
Relations between the groups were not always good. There were times when the Irish weavers were blamed for working for too little money and bringing down the rates of pay.
Dil
- 11 Feb 2019 20:44
- 12448 of 12628
Hils .... prove it.
Imo it goes to show they are just as shite at forecasting as Carney or come to that Gypsy Rose Lea and her tea leaves (Barry Island Funfair circa 1975).
hilary
- 12 Feb 2019 08:52
- 12449 of 12628
There's nothing to prove, Dilbert!
The clue is in the headline.... 'since the EU referendum'. The report isn't a forecast of what might happen in the future. It's an analysis of what's actually happened since the referendum.
Did you vote to be poorer? Cos the other 48% certainly didn't.
Dil
- 12 Feb 2019 09:11
- 12450 of 12628
Hils , they are comparing it to pre referendum forecast.
Bit like saying compared to Carney and Osbourne's pre referendum forecasts house prices are 50% higher , people employed is x% higher , unemployment is x% lower , wages are x% higher etc etc.
Just means their pre referendum forecasts were as crap as usual.
Fred1new
- 12 Feb 2019 09:33
- 12451 of 12628
hilary
- 12 Feb 2019 10:20
- 12452 of 12628
Dilbert,
The OBR pre-referendum forecast of March 2016 assumed that the UK would vote to remain. It actually forecast very modest growth of around 2% for 2016, 2017 and 2018 compared to the actual growth already witnessed in 2014 (3.1%) and 2015 (2.3%). I do understand what you're saying, but there is nothing to suggest that the OBR 2016 forecast was overly optimistic, although the truth is that we'll never know.
What is interesting, however, is that growth forecasts were also made for the EZ for 2016, 2017 and 2018, and history has shown that the EZ beat those forecasts in each of the three years.
If anything therefore, there's an argument to be made that the OBR 2016 forecasts were overly pessimistic. You might be even worse off than the Resulotion study suggests!
hilary
- 12 Feb 2019 10:31
- 12453 of 12628
In addition, Dilbert, the Resolution study pinpointed higher than expected inflation as a primary cause. Every Brexiter bangs on about how exporters will benefit from weaker sterling after Brexit whilst conveniently neglecting to mention the fact that the UK has run a massive trade deficit in goods every month since I was a little girl.
Immediately before the referendum, sterling was stable against the euro at around 1.35. In the days after the referendum if fell around 10%, and now sits between 1.10 and 1.15. Sorry, but seeing as you depend upon the EU for so much produce, it's a no-brainer that Brexit-related inflation is going to hit the Great British public hard in their pockets.