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.
Fred1new
- 11 Jun 2014 10:11
- 42222 of 81564
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-27791749
Interesting figures.
Interest rates up?
Pound up?
Exports?
The number of people out of work in the UK fell by 161,000 to 2.16 million in three months to April, official figures show.
This has brought the unemployment rate down to 6.6%, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) said.
The number of people in work rose by a record 345,000, to 30.5 million, most of which are in full-time employment.
The number of people claiming Jobseeker's Allowance in June fell by 27,400 to 1.09 million, the ONS said.
But the quarterly rate of earnings growth, including bonuses, slowed sharply to 0.7% from 1.9% the previous month. This was largely due to delayed bonus payments, the ONS said.
The total number of people out of work is now at its lowest level for more than five years.
The continuing improvement in the jobs market in the three months to April was due mainly to jobs created in the private sector.
The number of jobs lost in the public sector was 100,000, but much of this this was down to the reclassification of employees of Lloyds bank from the public to the private sector. Taking out the Lloyds workers, 11,000 jobs were lost in the public sector.
More
Fred1new
- 11 Jun 2014 10:13
- 42223 of 81564
Why does McVey irritate me so much?
Much more than the Hazyone!
Unless she is the Hazyone in disguise!
Fred1new
- 11 Jun 2014 10:22
- 42224 of 81564
What I can't put together are the following.
Passports application demands are up!
Disposable incomes are down!
EZJ, IAG, TUI, and TCG down!
Value of Sterling up.
Borrowing rates?
Unless, passports means some ---- leaving a sinking ship?
Odd world.
Simplistic explanation from Manuel will be accepted!
cynic
- 11 Jun 2014 10:34
- 42225 of 81564
no bleedin' idea :-)
Fred1new
- 11 Jun 2014 11:17
- 42226 of 81564
9-)
I would suppose it is down to the M.E. stirrings and doubts about forward bookings and cancellations.
hilary
- 11 Jun 2014 11:53
- 42227 of 81564
Oh, that'll be it then. And silly little me though it was because employment data was ahead of expectations and punters want to buy sterling because the UK economy is booming. But wtfdik?
cynic
- 11 Jun 2014 11:54
- 42228 of 81564
btw, an interesting article i just read about strong recovery in the more northerly parts of the country .... sorry, but can't now find it, but recollect it was a sensible! on-line article from Telegraph
hilary
- 11 Jun 2014 11:56
- 42229 of 81564
You mean the scavengers are looking for jobs at long last?
cynic
- 11 Jun 2014 11:58
- 42230 of 81564
don't be a silly girl :-) .... note that i said it was a sensible article!
goldfinger
- 11 Jun 2014 12:01
- 42231 of 81564
SHOCKING SHOCKING SHOCKING SHOCKING SHOCKING SHOCKING SHOCKING
News & features
One in 11 Britons has less than £10 a month disposable income
One in 11 people, or 4.5 million British adults, have less than £10 a month left over once they have paid their essential bills, new research from thinkmoney has found.
With many households struggling to make ends meet, the findings from budgeting account provider thinkmoney reveal the worryingly small amounts of disposable income people have left once they've met all their financial commitments.
Of the 2,149 people polled, one in four said they had less than £50 a month to spend after bills.
Across the UK, the average monthly disposable income was £224.50. However, there was a wide gender difference with men reporting having disposable incomes averaging £272.50, almost twice as much as women (£190.20).
Young people reported having the least disposable income, with 18-24 year-olds averaging £174.20 – some 22% below the overall UK average. Almost one in three people in this age group have less than £50 a month to spend after bills.
By contrast, the wealthiest in terms of post-bills spending money are people over 65, with an average of £269.50 a month available to spend.
The amount of disposable income also varies depending on where people live. It is highest in London, at an average of £261, and the South East, at £244. People in the North East and Wales have the lowest disposable incomes, at £199 and £181 respectively.
Worryingly, one in six people questioned in Wales said they had less than £10 a month to spend after bills.
“It’s stressful not knowing if you will have enough money to pay the bills and afford added extras each month,” said Ian Williams, director of communications at thinkmoney.
Use our Budget planner to work out how much money you have coming in and what you're spending it on
goldfinger
- 11 Jun 2014 12:02
- 42232 of 81564
SHOCKING SHOCKING SHOCKING SHOCKING SHOCKING SHOCKING SHOCKING
News & features
One in 11 Britons has less than £10 a month disposable income
One in 11 people, or 4.5 million British adults, have less than £10 a month left over once they have paid their essential bills, new research from thinkmoney has found.
With many households struggling to make ends meet, the findings from budgeting account provider thinkmoney reveal the worryingly small amounts of disposable income people have left once they've met all their financial commitments.
Of the 2,149 people polled, one in four said they had less than £50 a month to spend after bills.
Across the UK, the average monthly disposable income was £224.50. However, there was a wide gender difference with men reporting having disposable incomes averaging £272.50, almost twice as much as women (£190.20).
Young people reported having the least disposable income, with 18-24 year-olds averaging £174.20 – some 22% below the overall UK average. Almost one in three people in this age group have less than £50 a month to spend after bills.
By contrast, the wealthiest in terms of post-bills spending money are people over 65, with an average of £269.50 a month available to spend.
The amount of disposable income also varies depending on where people live. It is highest in London, at an average of £261, and the South East, at £244. People in the North East and Wales have the lowest disposable incomes, at £199 and £181 respectively.
Worryingly, one in six people questioned in Wales said they had less than £10 a month to spend after bills.
“It’s stressful not knowing if you will have enough money to pay the bills and afford added extras each month,” said Ian Williams, director of communications at thinkmoney.
Use our Budget planner to work out how much money you have coming in and what you're spending it on
goldfinger
- 11 Jun 2014 12:04
- 42233 of 81564
MP’s Scrounging Is Out Of Control: Cap Esther McVey’s Housing Benefit
Posted on June 10, 2014 by johnny void
Generation-rentMPs are being handed huge subsidies to rent second homes in London whilst thousands of the capital’s poorest residents are being socially cleansed due to slashed benefits and soaring rents.
Unemployment Minister Esther McVey claimed a whopping £17,227 last year to rent a swanky central London pad whilst invisible Housing Minster Kris Hopkins trousered £18,045.
The total bill for MPs languishing in luxury properties at our expense came to over £5 million says pressure group Generation Rent who compiled the figures.
The maximum Housing Benefit available in London is just over £250 a week for a single person, around £100 a week less than McVey scrounges. This benefit goes to people in and out of work alike and was capped shortly after the current government weren’t elected. Soaring rents in London have meant that many new housing benefit claimants are working full time but still cannot afford the eye-watering cost of living in the capital.
Previously ministers, including Iain Duncan Smith, have claimed that there are plenty of properties still available in London to those affected by the cap. So why can’t McVey live in one of those instead of living on hand outs?
McVey earns far too much already to be eligible for housing benefit and in any case it is not payable for second homes, even if you claim you need them for work. She can easily afford to pay her own rent and if not then any state support she receives should be capped at the same level she expects everyone else to survive on. It’s about making the system fair after all, and it might even incentivise McVey to get a real job for once in her miserable life.
goldfinger
- 11 Jun 2014 12:24
- 42234 of 81564
Jobs jobs LOL LOL LOL LOL LOL LOL LOL
JOB these days means 6 MONTH TRAINING COURSE's resulting in nothing.
Explain how GDP is back to pre recession levels BUT the majority of middle class people in this country face a Cost Of Living Crisis.
Could it just be that the top 1% of the population have found that their as been a transfer/redistribution of wealth into their hands!!!!!!!!!!!
Stan
- 11 Jun 2014 12:25
- 42235 of 81564
goldfinger
- 11 Jun 2014 12:39
- 42236 of 81564
DISGRACE. Mind Ken Clarke looks like hes blathered every time he enters the house.
goldfinger
- 11 Jun 2014 12:41
- 42237 of 81564
electionista @electionista · 4h
Forsa poll: 60% of Germans say Merkel should back Juncker for commission president, 19% should favour relations with Britain over Juncker
tomasz
- 11 Jun 2014 12:43
- 42238 of 81564
UK unemployment falls , boom in job sector... coincidents with borders open for more people taking jobs that others dont...
Stan
- 11 Jun 2014 12:44
- 42239 of 81564
Boom? what boom.. there's no boom in this Country.
tomasz
- 11 Jun 2014 13:01
- 42240 of 81564
Neither here..lol
goldfinger
- 11 Jun 2014 13:11
- 42241 of 81564
Get it right tomasz........... boom in training sector. Boom in self employed Zombie Jobs where they have to apply for tax credits and then get caught by HMRC for over claiming because they are doing no where near a full time job.