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THE TALK TO YOURSELF THREAD. (NOWT)     

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 - 15 Jul 2014 12:00 - 43653 of 81564

gf
The polls above have one thing in common. They all show UKIP falling to 9%, 10% and 12%. That's about half the level needed for one MP. As the election approaches, UKIP will implode.

goldfinger - 15 Jul 2014 12:05 - 43654 of 81564

Not bothered about UKIP but you should as a Tory. These figures as you put it are falling but its not affecting labour.

What YOU should be worried about is todays increase in inflation and just how far off interest rate rises are. The housing market is at boiling point, these measures Carney as put in place are not working.

Fred1new - 15 Jul 2014 12:05 - 43655 of 81564

Hazy One,

In the present case of Cameron and crew the "Blind overseeing the Blind".

=============



Shortie,

Bet you are glad to get that off your chest.

8-)

--------

I have to admit, although I enjoy mocking the present incumbents of No 10 and cohorts who in comparison to previous administration appear incompetent I wouldn't like their briefs and accept grudgingly that some are "bright".

(But rank IDS and one of the most stupid ministers of recent time. Bluster, and more bluster.)

The only problems I really have is that they are not building for the future and rather than the thinking of the good for all of society are more inclined to try to protect their own political arses.

They are reactive not really proactive.

============

But in that they are so open to ridicule, I will help them along.

goldfinger - 15 Jul 2014 12:10 - 43656 of 81564

Hays hays Hays....daily Politics, ........sacked Tories are seething and out for a fight.

Fred1new - 15 Jul 2014 12:19 - 43657 of 81564

Does that mean both sides huffing and puffing!


Fred1new - 15 Jul 2014 12:23 - 43658 of 81564

Does anybody know the average unit house price of TW. new buys?

In and outside London preferably with numbers?

Haystack - 15 Jul 2014 12:25 - 43659 of 81564

Housing market is cooling.

goldfinger - 15 Jul 2014 12:31 - 43660 of 81564

LOL not so, the meeting is still going on this speaks volumes.........

11.20 Carney: UK housing market is biggest threat to recovery in the medium-term
Onto housing...and Mark Carney says that the UK housing market is the biggest risk to the durability of the recovery in the medium term.

The Bank's fear is that lenders become too reckless -- granting loans that are too risky, leading to too much indebtedness.

Carney explains that British people have a great record of repaying their mortgages, however deep their financial problems. That means they slash spending on everything else, hurting the wider economy.

His colleagues also weighed in:

BANK OF ENGLAND FPC'S TAYLOR - NOT SUSTAINABLE FOR HOUSE PRICES TO RISE FASTER THAN WAGES INDEFINITELY, BUT CAN CONTINUE FOR QUITE A LONG TIME
BANK OF ENGLAND FPC'S KOHN - FPC CANNOT REALLY ADDRESS RELENTLESS UPWARD PRESSURE ON HOUSE PRICES

goldfinger - 15 Jul 2014 12:32 - 43661 of 81564

Carney explains that British people have a great record of repaying their mortgages, however deep their financial problems. That means they slash spending on everything else, hurting the wider economy.

Claret Dragon - 15 Jul 2014 12:35 - 43662 of 81564

Recovery!!

Or just about averted Financial Oblivion for now?

Fred1new - 15 Jul 2014 12:35 - 43663 of 81564

Just listened to EU "debate".

Farage and cohorts in Europe remind me of tub-thumpers and pub room brawlers.

Only Farage stirs it and then disappears before the law arrives.

-------

Where does Daniel Hannan get his finances from?

cynic - 15 Jul 2014 12:49 - 43664 of 81564

categorically the housing market is now much quieter than it was, though there is still good life in it
This is partly the usual summer lull, and also some uncertainty as to what the new mortgage rules are and how hard they will be applied

how much effect a rate rise (it'll only be 0.25% as/when it happens) will have is hard to gauge, but probably not a great deal

goldfinger - 15 Jul 2014 12:53 - 43665 of 81564

Stop being silly 0.25% increase is a life threatner to most of these who have over borrowed in fact been encouraged to over borrow by this government.

It wont just be the housing market that is threatned but the whole economy as Carney states above.

And that 0.25% is just the beginning.

goldfinger - 15 Jul 2014 12:56 - 43666 of 81564

Another IDS balls up......

Bedroom Tax DWP report – immediate comments eg arrears up £140m

Uncategorized July 15, 2014 1 Comment

The DWP has finally released the first interim report into the bedroom tax today – 163 pages of mostly waffle on first reading but some really interesting issues emerge.

P17 for example has this:

Paying the shortfall
Landlords reported that, five months into the RSRS, 41 per cent of tenants have paid the full RSRS shortfall, 39 per cent have paid some and 20 per cent have paid none.

Let’s do a quick extrapolation and a more up to date one than this report. The bedroom tax has 471,000 affected households at an average of £14.40 per week cut in their Housing Benefit at February 2014 and this is a falling number from the 542,000 first reported. This means the total bedroom tax cut for the first year will be between £360m – £390m and here I use the lower £360m cut.

If 20% of tenants have not paid that means landlord arrears have increased by £72m
If the 39% who have paid some average 50% of the bedroom tax being paid than that is a further £70m of arrears landlords now have.
Combine the two and we see the bedroom tax has increased social landlord arrears by £140m

That is a good ballpark estimate although there are so many variables which can adjust that by as much as 20% either way giving a range of £112m – £168m. The decreasing number of affected households could reduce it although I use the 471,000 number of households which the lowest figure yet and is 190,000 or 28% fewer households than the DWP expected in their estimate the bedroom tax would affect 660,000 households. The longer the bedroom tax goes on the more tenants that wont be able to pay could increase landlord losses which will of course be added to by their possession costs which can average about £7,000 per property.

The DWP interim report is as vague and woolly as you would expect on this point (and every other point) and frankly the report is 163 pages of turgid indecisive nonsense and anyone expecting some revelatory insights will be seriously disappointed.

Arrears
Total arrears (for all reasons) held by social landlords increased by 16 per cent between April and October, although it must be emphasised that the cause of this is uncertain and we cannot directly attribute this increase to the RSRS. Landlords state that they will eventually evict RSRS-affected non-payers, though at the time of the research most were currently only in the early stages of this process. Many landlords expressed concern that
collecting rent from people who can’t afford to pay whilst in their current circumstances is damaging relations between landlords and tenants.

The above also on page 17 explains exactly what I mean. Arrears have risen but this is not due to bedroom tax! No we can’t possibly say that! So what is it down to then? Do you offer any explanation for this? Er…no! Ah I see so this is a whitewash then? You may say that I couldn’t possibly comment…blah blah blah!

Then we have the one genuine insight that the bedroom tax is damaging the landlord:tenant relationship. Yet this (a) comes from landlords, (b) is not commented upon at all and (c) is massively understated. Tenants no longer trust their social landlord and this is a huge matter with future planned reforms such as direct payment of HB to the tenant scaring the life out of social landlords and rightly so.

This report is as much of a charade and sham as the bedroom tax decision making process an the next report is due AFTER the next election. How convenient eh reader?

I do leave you with some mild amusement and look at page 13 for a real FREUDIAN slip and I wonder how long it will be before social landlords state there will be no effin funders?

interimrpt-nofinfunders.jpg?w=600&h=360

There is no F in funders lending to social landlords eh DWP?


If I haven’t dissuaded you from reading this whitewash of a report you can enjoy it here though please make sure no sharp implements are near and you are sitting comfortably. And just to be on the safe side make sure the smelling salts are handy so when you fall over in shock at just how inept, wish-washy, incompetent and frankly offensive this report is… You have been warned!

Haystack - 15 Jul 2014 12:59 - 43667 of 81564

Good to see IDS keeping his job as he is doing a great job.

goldfinger - 15 Jul 2014 13:14 - 43668 of 81564

A great job of making sure labour win the next GE.

In fact the truth is hes told the PM for the second time hes not leaving.

Now either

1. Camoron is weak

2. IDS as something on Camoron

tend to think its the latter. ......or a combination of both.

goldfinger - 15 Jul 2014 13:18 - 43669 of 81564

'Rate hike'

Food and non-alcoholic drinks prices rose overall, with vegetables, bread and chocolate among the foodstuffs going up in price.

Economists said that the price rises may strengthen the case for a rise in UK interest rates, which have been held at a record low of 0.5%, especially against a backdrop of rising house prices and falling unemployment.

"The news will further fuel expectations that the Bank of England will start raising interest rates sooner rather than later, with November looking the most likely month for the first hike," said Chris Williamson. chief economist at research firm Markit.

He added that fine June weather may have led retailers to hold back on summer clothing discounts.

goldfinger - 15 Jul 2014 13:19 - 43670 of 81564

'Painful'

Jeremy Cook, chief economist at currency company World First, said the rise in prices was "a big surprise".

"Inflation is now rising at its fastest rate since January, with clothing, food and transport contributing well," he said.

However, for people who have been living with below inflation wage increases, "the situation just got a little more painful," he said.

Wage rises began to match inflation in April, after six years of falling real wages.

But the latest figures show wages rising at less than 1%, well below the 1.9% rise in prices recorded in June, meaning household incomes are being squeezed again.

goldfinger - 15 Jul 2014 13:29 - 43671 of 81564

More arrears yes more arrears....what a mess this government is in.........

15 July 2014 Last updated at 13:07

More than half of tenants in arrears after benefit cut

_76270999_3ecc3ab3-1371-413c-99ef-007d8c

More than half of tenants affected by a housing benefit cut in England were in arrears five months after the changes were introduced, a report says.

Some 59% of tenants - more than 300,000 - were in arrears, analysis for the Department for Work and Pensions found.

Haystack - 15 Jul 2014 13:35 - 43672 of 81564

All going well and Conservative victory guaranteed!
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