goldfinger
- 09 Jun 2005 12:25
Thought Id start this one going because its rather dead on this board at the moment and I suppose all my usual muckers are either at the Stella tennis event watching Dim Tim (lose again) or at Henly Regatta eating cucumber sandwiches (they wish,...NOT).
Anyway please feel free to just talk to yourself blast away and let it go on any company or subject you wish. Just wish Id thought of this one before.
cheers GF.
Haystack
- 19 Dec 2013 22:12
- 34364 of 81564
No.
goldfinger
- 19 Dec 2013 22:22
- 34365 of 81564
Docks?
Stan
- 19 Dec 2013 22:23
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"Even the Labour party dumped clause IV in 1995." How many more times... there hasn't been a proper Labour Party for long before 1995.
goldfinger
- 19 Dec 2013 22:23
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Still havent answered my question 34363
Haystack
- 19 Dec 2013 22:25
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No There are private docks such as Felixstowe and Southampton container ports.
Stan
- 19 Dec 2013 22:25
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You should know by now G/F that H/S is just a right Wing Exstremist.
goldfinger
- 19 Dec 2013 22:32
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ohhhhhhhh knew that yonks ago.
Hes a grand lad though, a grand lad.
goldfinger
- 19 Dec 2013 22:33
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Go on then I give in? no good googling as it would be cheating.
Haystack
- 19 Dec 2013 22:35
- 34372 of 81564
The Bank of England
goldfinger
- 19 Dec 2013 22:37
- 34373 of 81564
ha ha ha excelent one.
Ill use that for my quiz night at the tory club tomorrow.
Fred1new
- 19 Dec 2013 22:40
- 34374 of 81564
Hays,
You seem to become more and more ridiculous.
Public Health.
NHS
Education
Road Transport
Police and Judicial System (in parts)
-------
One of the main problems in management in Public services was the para shooting educational trained idiots who often had little experience of the industries or management.
The other and possibly biggest problem was the effects of the war and lack of technology advances and old worked out plants etc.. which due to the country being broke after WW2 had monstrous.
========
But it was obvious there was stupidity of management and unions each provoking unnecessary divisions causing disruptions of production. This present government is provoking the return of the problems and divisions with the "them and us" propaganda of to-day.
The policies you seem to exonerate and applaud.
Suggest you revise your economic history rather than rely on hand down simplistic mantras, supported by your out dated clichés, which appeal to your archaic elitist mindset.
=========
The banks have been bailed out.
The bastions of simplistic capitalism.
Haystack
- 19 Dec 2013 22:46
- 34375 of 81564
The US Federal Reserve is still private.
MaxK
- 19 Dec 2013 23:19
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And just look what a fine job it's done looking after Uncle Sam, much like our own BoE.
MaxK
- 19 Dec 2013 23:25
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MaxK
- 20 Dec 2013 08:50
- 34379 of 81564
lol, and they can do that for the other two as well.
Fred1new
- 20 Dec 2013 09:18
- 34380 of 81564
Hays,
Talking about Public against Private services.
Is this the standards you wish.
=======
But not forgetting Old Boys who pull together.
goldfinger
- 20 Dec 2013 09:28
- 34381 of 81564
Scarey for a lot of people..........
Mortgage Misery For Millions If Rates Go Up
There is growing speculation that the Bank of England may begin to consider lifting the cost of borrowing within months.1:02am UK, Friday 20 December 2013 Mortgage approvals rise again.
Some four million would be not be able to pay their mortgage if rates rose
By Ed Conway, Economics Editor
Around four million families would not have enough cash to pay their mortgage if interest rates rose to barely half the rate they were before the crisis, according to Bank of England research.
The warning from the Bank comes amid growing speculation that it may begin to consider lifting the cost of borrowing within months.
Research published in the Bank's Quarterly Bulletin sketches out a worrying picture for UK households in the event of an increase in the cost of borrowing.
The Bank's statistics show that if rates rose by 2.5% to a level of 3%, more than half of the eight million families with mortgages would not have enough in their monthly budgets to afford the increased interest payments.
They would be forced to cut their spending or work longer hours.
However, the Bank said that if families' incomes increased by 5% in the coming years, then the proportion of mortgage-holders struggling to manage their payments would be around a third.
Insiders also pointed towards the fact that at present investors only expect interest rates to reach 1.7% by the end of 2016 - significantly lower than the 3% level in the Bank's scenario.
The shock would not be limited to those with mortgages. The Bank's report also found that almost 5% of small businesses in the UK faced a 50% or greater chance of defaulting if interest rates rose by four percentage points.
However, the report also found that for many families the current debt burden decreased over the past year.
The proportion of mortgagors struggling to pay for their accommodation remained relatively unchanged; the share of households worried about their debt levels dropped from 46% to 39%.
The most strain over the past year was felt by those who rent their home. The Bank's research shows that the number of renters who face credit card and unsecured loan interest bills of more than a fifth of their incomes has risen from 800,000 to 1.1 million this year.
The worry is that the households most exposed to debt problems are those who are renting, are unable to rely on the capital value of their home, and who have had to take out large loans to sustain their lifestyles.
Fred1new
- 20 Dec 2013 09:29
- 34382 of 81564
Things to come under privatisation unless of course there is a public bail out from
the tax payers purse:
Fred1new
- 20 Dec 2013 09:59
- 34383 of 81564
Have they arrested Wavey Dave?
If not why not?