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I have no idea whether or not he's going to be a "yes" man
They are ALL yes men. How often do MPs defy the whip? It's rare.
So why make that point then?
meless people sleeping on the streets, people going hungry, the disabled and infirm stranded in their homes, persecution of the jobless etc for a few quid more a month in your pocket then fine.
Just lol at this.
I see your on this forum, so you have a smartphone/computer/tablet of some description. How can you use this device, knowing that there are others out there going without? How do you sleep at night?
I also want to see more banking regulation (although neither have a great track record on this)
@wrecker, what more would you like to see, there has been a huge increase in banking regulation and capital requirements since the crash ? The banking levy has gone up 6 times ( I think) and the recent move from 0.15% to 0.20% represents a 30% increase in this tax and quite possibly will result in HSBC relocating it's HQ.
Personally I would like to see consumer credit rules introduced like we have in other countries, eg compulsory to supply tax return/accounts to get a mortgage (ie no self cert), minimum deposit, sharing of credit card data with legal limits as to how much you can borrow. We already have much higher capital requirements which make banks much safer and we have the EU imposed bonus caps.
@konabunny, I think quite a lot of people vote based on personal economics/taxes, they have an opinion that they cannot afford to vote otherwise.
Its the lack of money coming in from the economic crash/downturn that has meant we cannot afford it. Govt spending did not cause the crash and govt spending was not in any way shape or form casual in the recession.
No govt ever saves for a rainy day tory or labour and labour has run more surpluses than the Tories and GO matched the spending pledges.
JY Major handed Labour a budget surplus, they just turned it into a £90bn pa deficit. The deficit has made recovering from the recession much more difficult and it has made the recession much deeper than it would have been otherwise.
Unless you are a non dom
Non Dom status isn't tax evasion, its perfectly legal with significant increase in claimants during the last Labour government. The announced Labour crack down will most likely result in significant lost revenue to HMRC from direct and indirect taxes and general spending.
The rest of the EU can better afford their spending commitments as they raise a huge amount of money by having VAT on food. I refer to this point in response to comments about regressive tax regimes (inc general Tory bashing) when in fact we have one which is far more generous to the less well off than do our European cousins.
I see your on this forum, so you have a smartphone/computer/tablet of some description. How can you use this device, knowing that there are others out there going without? How do you sleep at night?
Ah yes the good old argument that unless you're a penniless hermit you have no right to be concerned about social justice and equality. So you're advocating a race to the bottom?
They are ALL yes men. How often do MPs defy the whip? It's rare.
Not in the last parliament it wasn't. (EDIT: [url= http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/2013/05/14/tory-rebels-david-cameron_n_3271051.html ]See here[/url]) But I completely disagree with your view that an MP should represent the views of his constituency on every issue as if he is merely the deliverer of the result of rolling referenda, you vote for your MP based on his qualities to do the best for your constituency, it is up to him to work out how to do that. If you think someone else could do it better, you vote for them at the next election.
@wrecker, what more would you like to see, there has been a huge increase in banking regulation and capital requirements since the crash ? The banking levy has gone up 6 times ( I think) and the recent move from 0.15% to 0.20% represents a 30% increase in this tax and quite possibly will result in HSBC relocating it's HQ.
It's not about what it costs them, it's about what they're allowed to do.
I'll bow to your superior knowledge on this (I'm not a financial type) but the catastrophe which was created by the banks being irresponsible dicks and then having the nerve to take OUR money to get them out of the shit can never be allowed to happen again. I'm not convinced that the checks and balances are currently in place to ensure this.
The facts that nobody has been held to account AND most are still very wealthy individuals grips my shit.
molgrips - Member...
Do you really think your family will actually suffer under labour? I don't just mean a few quid a month on tax.
For me, it's not about the tax, the difference isn't great.
Where Labour really worry me is on Education.
They've a history of really screwing it up for the children (not talking about teachers here) and if you thought Gove was a meddling twonk, you've obviously forgotten how much worse it can be under a bureaucratic, authoritarian, left wing version.
That's where I'm concerned about family potentially suffering under Labour - or even worse - a Labour/Green alliance. The damage to childrens' education damages their whole future.
And no amount of tweaking of tax systems, benefits, or welfare can really compare significantly.
For balance, I have similar concerns over the Conservatives and the NHS.
IMO, another term could allow them to do irreversible damage to an institution which serves the country better than any other alternative ever could. it's taken 60 years to build and i worry they could easily destroy it within the next 5.
So all this talk of tax/welfare difference really doesn't matter to me - they're not that different.
For me, it's a choice between childrens education or national health service suffering.
edit - or neither
Major handed Labour a budget surplus
He didn't, but he did hand over a balanced budget so a surplus occurred a few years later as Brown broadly followed Tory spending plans in Labour's first term.
For balance, I have similar concerns over the Conservatives and the NHS.
Labour has been saying that the Tories will destroy the NHS since 1948, despite being in power for 40 of the intervening years, they have proved completely incompetent at this task.
UK pays approx £48 billion a year in national debt interest payments
Without that debt, there would be no need for austerity...
This is probably about as close to the truth as all the toadying spin dreamed up by vast teams of PR agents and bullshit mongers that is being bandied around at the moment in the hope of suckering some mugs...
mefty - Member
Labour has been saying that the Tories will destroy the NHS since 1948, despite being in power for 40 of the intervening years, they have proved completely incompetent at this task.
Ok mefty.
You keep telling yourself that it's all about the extra penny in the pound in your pocket .
I see your on this forum, so you have a smartphone/computer/tablet of some description. How can you use this device, knowing that there are others out there going without? How do you sleep at night?
This really is a stupid point to make one can have access to the internet and also care about the poor and those in need. You can object to the excesses of the capitalist model without wanting to return to a cave dwelling feudal barter system. Its only minor use is it is an easy way to identify those who struggle to construct coherent arguments to justify their own selfishness
Ok mefty.
You keep telling yourself that it's all about the extra penny in the pound in your pocket .
A lazy stereotype, well done.
Did Darling just give up in the end? That rubber stamp must have taken a beating!
He didn't, but he did hand over a balanced budget so a surplus occurred a few years later as Brown broadly followed Tory spending plans in Labour's first term.
Is the much better answer
Given the accusations made towards the Tories, I am surprised they are not all in jail! Off the scale....
Where Labour really worry me is on Education.
They've a history of really screwing it up for the children
Really? Genuinely interested in when this happened?
Very funny newspaper endorsement from the younger generation for Labour - some cracking turns of phrase
[url= http://tab.co.uk/2015/05/06/ed-miliband/ ]The Tab[/url]
I love the end paragraph:
Vote for Labour if you want a foot in the door. Vote Conservative if you want the door gently closed in your face by a white-gloved porter.
It really doesn't matter who I vote for, the winner will be a Tory.
http://www.voterpower.org.uk/hertfordshire-north-east
They've a history of really screwing it up for the children (not talking about teachers here)
Okay - is there some sort of objective data that can substantiate or disprove this?
If this were the case, would you not expect education in Scotland to be significantly worse than in England considering Labour has been in power significantly more often than the Tories since WW2 there?
If this were the case, would you not expect education in Scotland to be significantly worse than in England considering Labour has been in power significantly more often than the Tories since WW2 there?
Eh? They haven't had devolved education for that long...
From the last page but this deserves a bit of challenge
If you are that poorly off the Tories won't help. If you are doing ok, then you would still do OK under labour, but the really poor people might also do better.
This or a variant of this is often quoted as a trueism on here but it's not, it's a just political view point.
The oposing view point is that growth is good for all and the best way to make the size of the welfare budget bigger is not to take a larger proportion of the overall pot but to make the pot bigger in the first place.
Just as a vote for the Tory's can be derided as a vote for greed and individualism a vote for Labour can be derided as a vote for jealousy and a lack of collective ambition.
"Why should I care if some people get really rich if me and my peers are a bit better off as well"
I know it's more nuanced than that but its also not as simple as "you vote tory, therefore you are a selfish arsehole"
The elephant in the room for both parties is productivity. Neither seem to be addressing that issue and that is really why we don't feel that well off, Labour or Tory, if they don't address the productivity issue then they are just fidling round the edges about how to dish out a pot that is growing slower than the amount that pot needs to fix.
Unless you are rich, own multiple properties or own a decent sized business, you are a moron for voting Tory and do not understand how the world works.
Oh and if you get your 'News' and information from mainstream newspapers you are also a moron.
HTH.
Unless you are rich, own multiple properties or own a decent sized business, you are a moron for voting Tory and do not understand how the world works.
Brilliant on all levels
The oposing view point is that growth is good for all and the best way to make the size of the welfare budget bigger is not to take a larger proportion of the overall pot but to make the pot bigger in the first place
Quite so but that is not an opposing viewpoint. Labour do not want to tax to the point that growth is stifled, despite many tories insisting that. Labour do want growth, but the difference is the manner of that growth. The Tory way is to reduce regulation to allow people to do as they see fit, but the problem is that whilst that can increase GDP nicely it ignores the fact that money begets money, privilege begets privilege and poverty begets poverty. That is the real problem I have with small government. If you let people sort it out for themselves then that results in less social mobility, or if you like less equal opportunity. And it's not malicious either. Hypothetically, if state schools are worse than private ones, the rich cannot be expected to send their kids to state schools and the poor cannot afford to pay - it's a logical conclusion of that situation - thus the poor kids are disadvantaged. The state then needs to spend more money on state schools to fix this issue, and it can only do that through tax of one sort or another.
I don't consider myself or a lot of people I know morons.
statements like that from Kudos are moronic.
Unless you are rich, own multiple properties or own a decent sized business, you are a moron for voting Tory and do not understand how MY VIEW OF the world works.
FTFY
How anyone can claim to know how 'the world works' is hilarious!
The elephant in the room for both parties is productivity.
Indeed. The result of a total lack of business investment, while companies pay out all profits to shareholders (instead of investing it back , a la Germany), and still unreformed banks seek to lend out all that money they got as bailouts and QA as mortgages (fuelling a housing boom) and easy credit (to buy shiny things), instead of providing investment funds to SME's.
Any of this sounding eerily familiar? Ringing any worrying bells?
Unfortunately, and somewhat unbelievably, none of the main parties are even discussing this. Which I think we can assume means they intend to do absolutely nothing at all about it.
Remember all that 'rebalancing the economy' guff from Osborne? So much for that!
So Mol given that large government and the issues that you mention currently co-exist - your solution seems somewhat misplaced. Plus strip out government interference and you find most of the educational establishment happy - in some cases, truly world class!
The elephant in the room for both parties is productivity. Neither seem to be addressing that issue and that is really why we don't feel that well off, Labour or Tory, if they don't address the productivity issue then they are just fiddling round the edges
Worse than that - basic wage economics - increase wages without increasing productivity and you end up with fewer people in work but earning more - in normal parlance that is called increasing inequality. So odd which part of the political intelligentsia are proposing that Band-Aid.
They've a history of really screwing it up for the children (not talking about teachers here)
also interested in the evidence of this and why if gove was so good he is not still doing the job ...
Plus strip out government interference and you find most of the educational establishment happy
Those running it may be happy but that does not mean the service they provide is good. How many times have the govt had to intervene in free schools?
Some have even had to be closed down as they were that poorly run.
Its just not true to claim that simply removing govt "inteference [ most would call it oversight or regulation ] remarkably makes all education better*. Even the briefest glimpse at the stats will confirm this, even to you.
* I am not sure why you said happy - was it because it was bit more nebulous and imprecise?
http://www.theguardian.com/education/2013/dec/13/government-shuts-free-school-discovery-west-sussex
This really is a stupid point to make one can have access to the internet and also care about the poor and those in need. You can object to the excesses of the capitalist model without wanting to return to a cave dwelling feudal barter system. Its only minor use is it is an easy way to identify those who struggle to construct coherent arguments to justify their own selfishness.
Why would I need to argue my own selfishness? I said in my first post that Ive no interest in supporting people I don't know and will never meet.
I want what will benefit me and people I know and care about, hence I'll vote for the party that provides it.
If you hate capitalism and wish to borrow more money to pay for benefits and create more public sector jobs, then you carry on, that's why you have a vote.
So Mol given that large government and the issues that you mention currently co-exist - your solution seems somewhat misplaced
Ah you mis-understand. I was speaking about general principles. In practice, either flavour of government can **** it up!
Government interfering with education is unwelcome, but government money is not. Our government is always somewhat left wing anyway, like most developed countries - they pay for our education, health, pension and so on, and this is good.
This raises another point. Gove is an absolute ****, and his ego-maniacal buggering about with education is what's damaging. That would be the same regardless of party affiliation, probably, so that's not an ideological point. The cutting of budgets though, that is.
I said in my first post that Ive no interest in supporting people I don't know and will never meet.
So you wouldn't care if there were beggars on the street and slums all around? You'd just avoid them and carry on with life? If that's really true then you are selfish, and selfishness is bad.
@wrecker, the big changes to regulation have tried to ensure "it will never happen again". Certainly many 100'000s have lost their jobs and substantial amounts of money from owning shares in bankrupt banks (you tend to get paid in shares) but of course they are not destitute. It's quite difficult as someone like Fred Goodwin (RBS) made some idiotic decisions but he didn't do anything illegal (so isn't going to jail). The fines which have been made on banks are huge, many many billions (admitedly mostly in the US as they are more aggressive on litigation there). I am all for the UK having a more balanced economy but every other country is trying to do the same thing too, eg move into high tech manufacturing etc
@JY, hum I seem to have blanked out from 1990 to '97 😳 . Scary how the deficit was spiraling out of control though up to 2010
even when we continue to spend more than we earn? interesting....
So you wouldn't care if there were beggars on the street and slums all around? You'd just avoid them and carry on with life? If that's really true then you are selfish, and selfishness is bad.
Would it be possible to walk around the outside of these hypothetical slums?
even when we continue to spend more than we earn? interesting....
Who was that aimed at?
They've a history of really screwing it up for the children (not talking about teachers here) and if you thought Gove was a meddling twonk, you've obviously forgotten how much worse it can be under a bureaucratic, authoritarian, left wing version.
Gove was trying to introduce a "...bureaucratic, authoritarian..." system. Ex-military teachers anyone?
I live with a teacher. My old man's a teacher. Two of my best friends are teachers. They have all worked under both Labour and Tory governments.
Your statement, sir, is utter crud.
" even when we continue to spend more than we earn? interesting...."Who was that aimed at?
I suspect that THM might have been thinking out loud after reading this comment in his beloved FT today:
[i][b]"The time has surely come to shift the focus from the obsession with fiscal deficits and debt. These were neither the cause of the crisis nor the solution". [/i][/b]
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/3249930a-f27c-11e4-892a-00144feab7de.html
They increased VAT, the rich pay much more VAT.
Just saying. 🙂
Thanks but as usual Ernie, you are wide of the mark. Stick to voicing your own opinions rather than speculating on other people's please.
Good to see you reading a quality paper though.
The financial crises was one where too much debt caught up with a lot of people/businesses/countries. The fact our debt levels where pretty high due to large budget deficits run up under Labour meant we had little flexibility in how we dealt with the crises. Spending our way out simply wasn't an option.
The fact our debt levels where pretty high due to large budget deficits run up under Labour
Hindsight is great of course.
I'm not saying they were blameless, but I think they were trying to undo previous under-investment no?
It's always more complicated than you think.
Would it be possible to walk around the outside of these hypothetical slums?
why would you want to? surely you'd be lapping up the sights that remind you of your own superiority over these low life scum whilst you mentally compose your next opus magnus to the daily mail
The fact our debt levels where pretty high due to large budget deficits run up under Labour
In a normal world the budget deficit run up to invest in schools, hospitals and other public infrastructure would have been perfectly manageable. As with the bloody gold, if labour are guilty of anything, it's of not being able to predict the future. And much as I don't want to repeat myself for the nth time, nothing would have been any different had the tories been in power at the time.
The fact our debt levels where pretty high due to large budget deficits run up under Labour meant we had little flexibility in how we dealt with the crises.
Shame they wasted the Major surplus they inherited eh 😆
Nicely ignored 😆
what molly and daz said the global crises was not their fault nor were the consequences
in a normal world the budget deficit run up to invest in schools, hospitals and other public infrastructure would have been perfectly manageable.
If the budget deficit had been run up by investing in schools, hospitals etc. then there wouldn't be a bloody problem
In fact it was run up employing hundreds of thousands of civil servants pushing around pointless paperwork (ever filled in a tax credits form?) diversity officers, Millenium domes, hosting the Olympics and invading other countries!
@Pipmaster reading that now, thanks for the link. Organisations like the Equality Trust love to talk about "percentages of income" and "indirect" taxes. Here are some numbers I posted up a while ago.
On VAT (page 20) they don't say that much other to show a chart that says the bottom 10% pay 11.6% of their income on VAT and the top 10% pay 4.39% in VAT
So using £25k gross as a proxy for bottom 10% household income. Post income tax and NI that's £20k pa. 11.6% of that is £2,300 which would mean they would have to be spending £11,600 pa on VAT-able items. Now rent, food and utilities are all low/zero rated - the numbers just don't work as they'd be spending just £8,400 on rent, food and utilities and £11,600 on "luxuries" ie VAT rated items. It does not compute, the numbers just don't stack up unless they are living in a shoe box and eating hardly anything whilst living it up on VAT-able items.
This is also where we get back to portions of income, the better off save more for example so of course it doesn't attract tax on a portion of income basis. What you need to do to make a reasonable comparison is look at the absolute amount of taxes paid and compare that to the portion of society that pays them.
If the budget deficit had been run up by investing in schools, hospitals etc. then there wouldn't be a bloody problem
So all the new schools and hospitals didn't cost money?
@molgrips yes agreed always more complicated than we'd like
@JY I posted up an 😳 earlier. Labour had the reigns and a chancellor who announced the end of boom and bust, they are gong to have to carry the can electorially as did pretty much every government apart from the Germans who co-incidentally had the a good budget surplus and low debt levels. I said the Labour policies gave the UK far less room to manouver post crises. We are also overly reliant and thus exposed to financial services, 13 years of Labour didn't change that much either - they where happy to take the taxes and economic benefits.
So all the new schools and hospitals didn't cost money?
No, but like he said, they're an [i]investment[/i] that (if run well) will pay back in the long term
Pointless make-work for civil servants isn't!
Another post on VAT as a regressive tax - or not, bear with me 😐
So using my table above at the 25k gross = £20,088 net and £100k gross and £65,328 net points as an example
Making assumptions for food/rent I estimate the £25k pa household spends £5k pa on VAT-able items so pays £1k a year or 5% of their income on VAT. The £100k household I estimate spends £26k on VATable items (they save money also as well as spending more on rent/mortgage/food) so that generates £5+k in VAT or 8% of their net income.
So the £25k earner pays a lower rate of VAT, whilst the higher earner pays a higher rate and 5 times the total amount. Using income tax, NI and VAT the £25k earner pays a total tax take of 25% whereas the £100k earner pays 43% - getting on for double the tax rate and would certainly be more than double if you include employers national insurance.
Our deficit was run up, in part, Greek style with the borrowing used to pay state sector wages and benefits. We don't build [s]£90bn[/s] £40 billion worth of roads, schools and hospitals EVERY year, the deficit doesn't represent investment.
EDIT: I edited £90bn above to £40bn to exclude national debt interest
So all the new schools and hospitals didn't cost money?
Yes, but not money included in the figures is financed by PFI as you have replaced financial gearing with operational gearing.
@JY I posted up an earlier.
Ah fair enough I missed it
Here have one back
😳
We all make mistakes
Re equality Trust report
It does not compute, the numbers just don't stack up unless they are living in a shoe box
the figures come from the ONS _ I suspect they are correct but I agree there is nothing in the way of explanation.
This is the best i can find
http://www.ons.gov.uk/ons/rel/household-income/the-effects-of-taxes-and-benefits-on-household-income/2012-13/info-taxes.html
I assume the source is in here somewhere
http://www.ons.gov.uk/ons/rel/household-income/the-effects-of-taxes-and-benefits-on-household-income/index.html
JY the poorest fifth cannot have an income of 5k pa, thje chart shows that how much they pay in taxes. Also you cannot discount benefits/tax credits, they make a huge difference to the income of the poorest. Also that post talks about "equivilised" whatever that means, I think it's a way of saying poor families tend to be larger so they need more money.
JY, two posts together ?
😉
How easily we forget!
Indeed, I have a few friends in IT who have made some very good money working on various failed government IT projects, eg around the NHS
It was done as a deliberate homage
Please feel free to write to the ONS and explain to them what they have done wrong and why their figures are wrong. I feel certain they will change it based on your calculations and objections on here
As for equaivalised it said big families need more money than smaller families to have the same standard of living. It makes no mention nor assumption of where they lie on the income distribution scale [ Do I really need to explain why?] . I am sure this comes a shock to you and you can do some quick calculations to negate this out of the box thinking 😕
http://www.ifs.org.uk/wheredoyoufitin/about.php
here is a explanation for you
it might 😛
If a household has two earners and posts about 360 quid in income tax then each one pays about 180 quid suggesting they earn very slightly more than the personal allowance limit, ie about 10k each. Alternatively if there is only one earner they still only earn a bit more than the 10k mark. That's my wild speculation anyway.
as you are to lazy to click on the link 😉
The income that a household needs to attain a given standard of living will depend on its size and composition. For example, a couple with dependent children will need a higher income than a single person with no children to attain the same material living standards. "Equivalisation" means adjusting a household's income for size and composition so that we can look at the incomes of all households on a comparable basis. Official income statistics use the 'Modified OECD' equivalence scale, in which an adult couple with no dependent children is taken as the benchmark with an equivalence scale of one. The equivalence scales for other types of households can be calculated by adding together the implied contributions of each household member from the table below.
Modified OECD Equivalence Scale
Head 0.67
Subsequent adults 0.33
Each child aged 0-13 0.20
Each child aged 14-18 0.33
For example, a household consisting of a single adult will have an equivalence scale of 0.67 - in other words he or she can typically attain the same standard of living as a childless couple on only 67 percent of its income. In a household consisting of a couple with one child aged three, the head of the household would contribute 0.67, the spouse 0.33, and the child 0.20, giving a total equivalence scale of 1.20. In other words this household would need an income 20 percent higher than a childless couple to attain the same standard of living. To gauge where you are in the income distribution, we ascertain the equivalence scale of your household and then calculate where you would lie if the rest of the population lived in households of the same type.
Not too lazy. Just too slow to type my post before you posted the link 🙂
Jambas - of course you don't analyse this data pre tax and benefits alone - unless of course
From the ONS
•Before taxes and benefits the richest fifth of households had an average income of £81,300 in 2012/13, almost 15 times greater than the poorest fifth who had an average income of £5,500.
•Overall, taxes and benefits lead to income being shared more equally between households. After all taxes and benefits are taken into account the ratio between the average incomes of the top and the bottom fifth of households (£59,900 and £15,600 per year respectively) is reduced to four-to-one.
(A progressive system?)
•Fifty-two per cent of households received more in benefits (including in-kind benefits such as education) than they paid in taxes in 2012/13. This is equivalent to 13.8 million households.
Etc
The actual research on VAT which should be measure differently (since it is not a tax on income and needs to be considered over the lifetime) is actually progressive in the sense that this term is used.
Of course, this stuff gets misused/abused to make false statements as we see on a regular basis
Indeed, I have a few friends in IT who have made some very good money working on various failed government IT projects, eg around the NHS
Aah.. well that's an interesing one.
The reason these projects fail is because of the way they're run. Government agencies have to use these big IT companies like Accenture etc, and whilst they do their best they are under pressure to reduce their own costs to a minimum, which can impact quality, and they are not integrated into the Agency for whom they are working.
The latter of those points is a huge issue. They expect the agency to be able to give them requirements for a solution, but the agencies are staffed with civil servants who know their legislation and business but have no idea how to express that to IT companies, but they need to keep the boundaries for some reason so that the IT companies cannot really place people to sort things out. Basically, it's like when Homer Simpson designs a car. They don't really have any idea what they are asking for.
For example, one govt agency I worked for, traditionally you sent them a form to change an address or some detail etc. Lots of different forms you could send in. So when it came to implementing the system they made a system that processed these forms, with lots of code specific to validating each one. Why? Why not make a website where you can log on and just type in your new details? They couldn't change the way they work.
Then I worked for another agency that again made you send in paper forms. They also needed validating, so I wrote almost the exact same code twice for two different agencies.
But that's the Tory way - we outsource everything regardless of the results. Much of the profit is going overseas because most of the companies are foreign. What we really need is a government IT agency that keeps core skills and pays well; then we need to give them the power to run the projects.
Current rules even have different companies working on different bits of large solutions, and they end up not talkign to each other and spending millions trying to determine the boundaries between each company's area and figuring out how to get the bits to communicate. It's a disaster.
A progressive system?)
Yes it is but that does not mean VAT is progressive and you need to take it up with the ONS who will be delighted to change their description of it as a regressive tax based on your observation as they will be unable to defend your false statement charge.
Current rules even have different companies working on different bits of large solutions, and they end up not talkign to each other and spending millions trying to determine the boundaries between each company's area and figuring out how to get the bits to communicate. It's a disaster.
To say nothing of the time and energy spent on not finding a solution but listening to the various "contributors" to the system pointing the finger and blaming each other. Put that much effort into getting it right and we might just end up with something that works.
The latter of those points is a huge issue. They expect the agency to be able to give them requirements for a solution, but the agencies are staffed with civil servants who know their legislation and business but have no idea how to express that to IT companies, but they need to keep the boundaries for some reason so that the IT companies cannot really place people to sort things out. Basically, it's like when Homer Simpson designs a car. They don't really have any idea what they are asking for.
They also change their minds frequently and have daft contracts in place. There have been some good ones based on value based deals but equally some really bad ones based on time and materials. When someone decides that they want something added or the scope changes the cost goes through the roof. As the civil service is managed by committees and not individuals prepared to stick their necks out and be accountable it all tends to drag on and the scope creeps.
I don't consider myself to be Tory by any means, but every time in my lifetime that labour has been in power they've left the country in a mess. Brown & Blair, spent billions on tax credits buying middle class votes, subsidising scrooge employers and getting people hooked on state handouts.. it was Brown that put vat on gas and electricity - fuel poverty anyone? It was Brown that robbed billions from pension funds making us all poorer. They then took us to a needless war and gave us public private initiative that will take decades to pay off. All this whilst borrowing beyond our means.
I don't like much of what the Tories do but I'd take them over Ed Balls any day.
I am by no means an expert in government procurement of IT but the last government's approach would appear to be starting to address some of the issues outlined.
[url= https://www.gov.uk/government/speeches/francis-maude-spoke-on-technology-procurement-and-smes ]See here[/url]
Maude has been one of the most effective ministers in the last government.




