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NorthXNorthWest · 26/05/2026 11:50

Papyrophile · 26/05/2026 08:35

Catching up on last night's contributions. Big thanks to everyone for their carefully worded and constructive thoughts, and for the insights into other people's lives. We're running out of thread here, but I wish we could forward this to every politician and civil servant in a senior role.

I wish I had the confidence that it would make a difference to politicians and civil servants reading this. I am all out of trust.

Nemorth · 26/05/2026 12:00

OneShyQuail · 26/05/2026 07:39

Its £300 per year, so split over bday and xmas, and this is the first time ive ever been able to save for a holiday....so you haven't done an "expensive holiday in years" we never have.....

I save for emergencys, I save for the kids (driving and house deposit) have done for years. There's been nothing left previously as a single parent. Its only now I have a partner we are in a position to go away....

People are reading my post like weve holidayed for years.... we haven't 🤷‍♀️

the post I quoted first quite clearly said £300 per child for Christmas. No mention of birthdays. That developed later (I saw it come in).

DrRylandGrace · 26/05/2026 14:39

NorthXNorthWest · 25/05/2026 21:45

Warning! Long because I don't really have anything else to add after this.

Your posts raise some legitimate issues around demographics, productivity, pension sustainability, infrastructure, incentives and the long-term fiscal pressures facing the UK. I do not doubt that most serious economists would accept that the UK faces genuine structural economic problems which cannot simply be ignored.

Where I think the discussion starts to fall apart is when quite absolutist economic opinions are presented as though they are basically unquestionable mathematical facts. Economics is not mathematics or physics. There are multiple schools of thought, different assumptions, behavioural responses and political trade-offs. As the joke goes - put 10 economists in a room and you’ll get 11 opinions.

That is why statements like:
– “mathematically there is no other option”
– “the maths simply doesn’t provide any other possible outcome”
– “it will happen regardless”
– “anybody who understands basic maths can see…”
fall short, especially when compared with the nuance and uncertainty that serious economic analysis often involves.
You also repeatedly imply that disagreement can only really come from ignorance. I would refer you back to the old joke about 10 economists in a room. Economics is full of competing theories, imperfect information, political trade-offs and debates about incentives, behaviour and risk.

There are lots of possible responses to long-term fiscal pressure:
– productivity and growth reforms
– industrial strategy
– infrastructure investment
– immigration and labour market reform
– healthcare reform
– pension reform
– retirement age changes
– tax reform
– housing and planning reform
– borrowing
– mixed public/private approaches.
They all present different cost/benefit trade-offs. Reasonable people can disagree about those trade-offs without dismissing each other as incapable of “big picture thinking”.

You also double down in some of your replies in a manner that undermines your credibility and your arguments. There is a difference between arguing strongly and repeatedly implying that disagreement mainly reflects ignorance or stupidity.
Comments like:

“economically illiterate electorate”
“mathematical illiterates”
“my primary school children understand this”
“people refuse to accept economic reality”
“grabby and entitled people”
“self-righteous retirees”
“people have no grasp of basic maths”

It is a debate, not a mental wrestling match where the aim is to shame opponents into silence or submission. I have been guilty of this myself and am trying to do better.
Have you considered that people may disagree because they have legitimate concerns? They may:

– question the assumptions
– disagree with the weighting of causes
– distrust how reforms would actually be implemented
– support universal systems because they believe they are the right thing to do
– or think behavioural and social consequences matter more than you do.
That is not the same thing as being incapable of understanding economics or believing the current situation can continue indefinitely.
To be fair, some of your proposals are entirely reasonable. They are also things that many people you have levelled your disdain toward have already discussed themselves:

– infrastructure investment
– industrial strategy
– vocational training and education reform
– childcare provision
– reducing tax cliff edges
– preventative healthcare
– improving productivity and incentives.
They are all legitimate policy discussions. It’s that pesky word again: “discussion”.

But even there, I think your A+B=C approach understates how difficult implementation is in reality. A lot of the argument seems to assume that:
– savings from pension reform would actually be redirected into productive investment
– governments would maintain disciplined long-term strategies
– behavioural responses would remain manageable
– and means-testing would not fundamentally damage trust in the pension and savings system itself.

Those are pretty huge assumptions, not mathematical certainties.
And this is where I think the contribution-based side matters more than you are prepared to acknowledge. The creation of the post-war welfare state was not originally framed as charity.

Beveridge himself wrote:
“Benefit in return for contributions, rather than free allowances from the State, is what the people of Britain desire.”

and my particular favourite,

“The State in organising security should not stifle incentive, opportunity, responsibility; in establishing a national minimum, it should leave room and encouragement for voluntary action by each individual to provide more than that minimum for himself and his family.”

That distinction matters politically and psychologically because many people do not see the state pension as simply “free money”, but as part of a reciprocal social contract tied to decades of National Insurance contributions and deferred entitlement. That does not mean reform should never happen. But it does help explain why people react strongly to aggressive means-testing proposals. Many see it not just as fiscal reform, but as weakening the contribution principle and changing the rules after people have spent decades planning around them.

I also think there is a broader behavioural issue here that your analysis and proposed solutions miss. If people increasingly feel that:

– prudent saving will simply reduce future support or be used by the government as an extension of the public purse
– pension rules will continually change
– asset accumulation will be penalised
– long-term planning is unreliable
– or security in retirement is becoming increasingly uncertain

then people will naturally change their behaviour accordingly. There are always unintended consequences. Look at what happened when it was suggested that the tax-free portion of pensions could be reduced. There was an uptick in people taking their tax-free lump sums. Many people use that money to clear remaining mortgages or stabilise their retirement finances, not simply for luxury spending.

Or take the Renters’ Rights Bill. Regardless of what people think about smaller landlords, many were still providing additional homes for the rental market. Large numbers exiting the market was hardly ideal. Reducing supply while demand remains high simply creates further pressure and instability elsewhere in the system.

What will be the intended and unintended consequences of the mansion tax or AB’s potential land value taxes? Many homeowners are asset-rich on paper but cash-poor in reality. People often say they can simply downsize, but downsize into what exactly? There aren’t enough homes, let alone enough of the right type of homes in the right locations. Yes, freeing up larger family homes may help a few buyers. But there is uncertainty at the moment, so many people will delay big purchases. A quick look at the market will tell you many of those homes are already languishing. The people downsizing then move into two or three-bedroom homes and start competing with first-time buyers, younger families and other downsizers in an already constrained market. If there are still not enough homes overall (and it will take years to deliver them), pressure does not disappear, it simply shifts elsewhere within the system.

Governments have not been entirely honest, upfront or consistent when it comes to tax policy, incentives and market intervention. So I think you overstate the level of trust many people still have in them, particularly those who have spent decades trying to build stability and independence for later life. Not just people, but businesses too. How many firms have chosen not to expand because of rising tax burdens, higher employer NI, business rates, wage pressures and difficult trading conditions all arriving at once? Businesses that feel unable to plan with confidence often become more cautious, and that is not generally good for investment, productivity or growth.

So we end up with:
– lower saving
– lower investment
– reduced trust in institutions
– reduced entrepreneurial risk-taking
– lower workforce participation
– or even moving assets and talent elsewhere.

Those are entirely predictable first and second-order economic effects. You mentioned cliff edges yourself. What is the incentive to move beyond them if people can end up worse off overall through a combination of taxation and/or withdrawal of support? That is a perfect example of behaviour adapting, but not necessarily in a way that benefits the wider economy.

You also clearly place a lot of emphasis on pensions and demographics, but I do not think the UK’s problems can really be reduced mainly to retirees or welfare costs.

There are also major structural issues:
– weak productivity growth
– underinvestment
– housing shortages
– planning failures
– unstable industrial policy
– infrastructure weakness
– declining investment confidence
– Brexit-related trade frictions
– and decades of political short-termism, with taxpayers often ultimately carrying the cost.

Add in the broader issue of the UK making money increasingly through debt, owning assets and/or moving money around rather than through productive work, innovation, infrastructure and long-term investment and you have the perfect storm. Property becoming treated primarily as an asset class rather than somewhere to live is probably one of the clearest examples of that in the UK economy. That was driven far more by decades of policy, finance-led growth and structural incentives than by ordinary pensioners.

Who got the dividends and who is picking up the cost for the water companies? Because I also think there are valid questions around relying so heavily on partnerships and investment structures focused primarily on maximising short and medium-term investor returns, often using complex tax “efficient” structures that can move large portions of profits out of the country rather than supporting long-term productive investment and sustainable economic growth. It goes without saying that investment is essential, but fiduciary responsibility matters too, because incentives and time horizons are important. If large parts of the system increasingly reward:

– asset extraction
– short-term returns
– leveraged gains
– complex tax efficiency structures
– and investment models built around relatively short 3–5 year exit windows

then where is the incentive for genuinely patient long-term investment?
Shareholders and PE are not necessarily the saviours many people present them as.
Where are the investors willing to:
– build productive capacity over decades
– invest through weaker periods
– prioritise long-term infrastructure
– support innovation with uncertain payoffs
– or accept slower returns in exchange for a stronger and more stable economy over the longer term?

I am concerned about how reliant the UK has become on international capital and external investors in ways that can benefit the country in the short term, but allow a large proportion of the longer-term profits, dividends and returns to ultimately flow back out of the country again. Like I said foreign investment is not inherently bad and obviously the UK benefits from external capital, jobs and investment. But if too much of the economy becomes structured around short-term capital flows, asset inflation and extracting returns rather than building long-term productive capacity, resilience and domestic investment, then that can create long-term structural weaknesses of its own as well.

And while comparisons with countries like Australia are interesting, systems cannot always be transplanted neatly between countries with very different:
– demographics
– resource wealth
– pension structures
– housing markets
– immigration patterns
– and institutional histories.
Australia also benefits from a very different resource base and economic structure to the UK.

You clearly more informed in some areas than than many posters and some of the structural concerns you raise are perfectly valid. But you don't have to be an economist to understand incentives, behavioural responses or the importance of trust in institutions. Nor should economic literacy become an excuse for hostility toward people who disagree with you.

I find my own views challenged and adjusted regularly through discussions. Some core beliefs will stay the same, such as believing a civilised society should have a social security system, but other views evolve over time as I am exposed to different viewpoints and research different subjects.

Your points comes across as dictatorial, dismissive and at times openly contemptuous toward people who disagree with you. Ironically, given how economically literate you clearly are, that feels like a missed opportunity to genuinely educate people or challenge their thought processes rather than alienating or trying to shame them.

People are far more receptive to an economist analysing trade-offs than to a politician defending an ideological position.

I may respond in more detail later but I’m not sure I’m inclined to invest any more of my time in this. Around 50% of your response is either retstating things that I’ve already stated myself or things which are blindingly obvious so were not worth mentioning at all. The question I was asked which was “what measures could be taken to fix the UK economy?” not whether any Government will actually do it (they won’t) or that the electorate would vote for it (they won’t): that’s why things are such a mess. Much of what you wrote is not relevant to the specific question that my post was answering.

The other 50% of your response seems to consist of yet more tiresome personal comments about me and that you don’t like my writing style etc. rather than being about the economic issues, so is not relevant to the thread or my comment to which you responded and, therefore, yet again lowers the tone of the debate. This makes me far less inclined to spend my time later writing a detailed response later because you are attempting once again to turn a discussion about economics into an excuse to make personal comments to someone that you don’t even know.

I didn’t ask for your opinion on my personality and I have tolerated quite enough personal insults on this thread already (not to mention that it is immensely hypocritical for you to criticise me for describing bluntly the level of ignorance and stupidity from a large proportion of our politicians and electorate while simultaneously writing a post to me that is incredibly patronising given I’ve already stated the profession in which I’ve been working for over two decades; repeating things I’ve already stated myself as though you are teaching me this information (!); and phrasing your comments similarly to how one would talk if trying to explain these issues to child in early primary school).

Play the ball, not the (wo)man. It’s really sad that this is the level of discourse that people engage in on serious topics.

NorthXNorthWest · 26/05/2026 15:04

DrRylandGrace · 26/05/2026 14:39

I may respond in more detail later but I’m not sure I’m inclined to invest any more of my time in this. Around 50% of your response is either retstating things that I’ve already stated myself or things which are blindingly obvious so were not worth mentioning at all. The question I was asked which was “what measures could be taken to fix the UK economy?” not whether any Government will actually do it (they won’t) or that the electorate would vote for it (they won’t): that’s why things are such a mess. Much of what you wrote is not relevant to the specific question that my post was answering.

The other 50% of your response seems to consist of yet more tiresome personal comments about me and that you don’t like my writing style etc. rather than being about the economic issues, so is not relevant to the thread or my comment to which you responded and, therefore, yet again lowers the tone of the debate. This makes me far less inclined to spend my time later writing a detailed response later because you are attempting once again to turn a discussion about economics into an excuse to make personal comments to someone that you don’t even know.

I didn’t ask for your opinion on my personality and I have tolerated quite enough personal insults on this thread already (not to mention that it is immensely hypocritical for you to criticise me for describing bluntly the level of ignorance and stupidity from a large proportion of our politicians and electorate while simultaneously writing a post to me that is incredibly patronising given I’ve already stated the profession in which I’ve been working for over two decades; repeating things I’ve already stated myself as though you are teaching me this information (!); and phrasing your comments similarly to how one would talk if trying to explain these issues to child in early primary school).

Play the ball, not the (wo)man. It’s really sad that this is the level of discourse that people engage in on serious topics.

Don't both to respond. You answer is as predicted.

Also you:

DrRylandGrace · 24/05/2026 20:50 Papyrophile What has been notable is that despite the multiple personal attacks that have taken place (not directed at @Papyrophile , just to be clear, because that was the last comment I responded to I’m sure some are so hard of thinking they’d assume I was referring to this poster and I am not, as her comment was perfectly reasonable I just don’t understand the relevance to what I’d said so have queried this, but this was not a personal attack from her at all) NOT ONE of the posters making the personal attacks calling me “psychotic” or “spiteful” or whatever else has actually bothered to respond at all to my post earlier this afternoon at 13:40 (a detailed explanation of what steps I’d take most immediately to address the UK’s economic issues, as was demanded) let alone put forward an alternative explaining how they’d fix the problems in the UK economy and put forward an alternative prospectus of economic policies that they believe would mean that productivity and living standards would rise.

It seems that there is little interest at all in even discussing proposed solutions, only insulting and disparaging people even if they are complete strangers on the internet and making up things to try to discredit them: no engagement whatsoever with any kind of economic discussion about ways to improve things. Very depressing, and precisely why the UK economy is screwed.

Stunning.

For all the wrong reasons.

We are not being screwed by who you think we are. I think the irony and lack of self-awareness on display throughout parts of this thread speaks for itself on that one...

DrRylandGrace · 26/05/2026 15:13

BIossomtoes · 25/05/2026 12:30

https://www.retirementlivingstandards.org.uk/

There are some figures here.

And these are stated after tax and housing costs. What is apparent is that a very large proportion of families with children have nowhere near these levels of income, so there is a legitimate discussion to be had about why we are handing out welfare to people whose private income/ wealth enables them to exceed even the very generous “comfortable” income stated in this study, when many families who don’t even have the basic or moderate level are not getting anything like £1000 per month of welfare (and don’t forget that the £1000 excludes any additional top ups with winter fuel allowance, social care costs that the state covers, prescriptions, bus passes, pension credit, housing costs, attendance allowance etc…).

This is why the most sensible approach is to means test the state pension, given the state pension welfare dwarfs all other parts of the welfare budget and is rising as a proportion of the welfare expense every year. If it was means-tested to taper away to zero at the “comfortable” retirement level per the PLSA standards you linked to (i.e. £43,900 AFTER tax and housing costs for an individual, or £60,600 for a couple) then this would create zero poverty for pensioners, obviously, and save the state £80-90bn per year which is desperately needed to be invested in chronically underfunded areas of the economy which are actually productive and therefore require investment for there to be any hope of living standards rising (education, infrastructure, etc, per my earlier posts). This could be transformative for future generations.

I can’t see what the rational or moral argument against this proposal is, and none has been put forward on this thread or others on the same topic. Why should people substantially poorer than these pensioners be being hammered with the highest tax rates in peacetime in history to pay non-means tested welfare to the wealthy pensioners who have absolutely no need of it (and haven’t paid anywhere near enough tax as a cohort to fund this)?

This is a direct transfer of wealth from families to the elderly, who are already on average the richest cohort in society. Obviously there is disparity in the wealth in that group and some do genuinely need the state pension, but why should we keep paying it to those who don’t?

As stated previously, obviously at the same time you have to make pension saving mandatory with no opt out so that even more people can’t just decide not to bother to save to avoid the means testing and force their children and grandchildren to pick up the tab. Australia has operated a perfectly sensible system for decades which is similar to what I’ve been suggesting, which they used to replace their old system (which was based on ours!) when it became obvious decades ago that the old system wouldn’t be sustainable due to demographic changes. I’m not sure why people think this is impossible to implement in the UK when other countries such as Australia have done so successfully.

It is an inescapable fact that state pensions are by FAR the most wasteful area of public spending when everything else has been cut to the bone, with the resulting negative outcomes with falling living standards. It’s inexplicable that anybody would still be asserting that this huge imbalance in public spending should continue without providing any rational or moral justification for handing out this enormous amount of welfare to people who don’t require it. It all seems to be based on an entitled view that amounts to “I want it and thought I’d get it (even though it’s always been clear that, as with any welfare, the eligibility criteria can change at any point) so I should have it even if the country can’t afford it and it will mean no prospect of growth or prosperity for my children or grandchildren”.

That’s simply not a defensible position nor one that any reasonable person would try to defend.

DrRylandGrace · 26/05/2026 15:15

NorthXNorthWest · 26/05/2026 15:04

Don't both to respond. You answer is as predicted.

Also you:

DrRylandGrace · 24/05/2026 20:50 Papyrophile What has been notable is that despite the multiple personal attacks that have taken place (not directed at @Papyrophile , just to be clear, because that was the last comment I responded to I’m sure some are so hard of thinking they’d assume I was referring to this poster and I am not, as her comment was perfectly reasonable I just don’t understand the relevance to what I’d said so have queried this, but this was not a personal attack from her at all) NOT ONE of the posters making the personal attacks calling me “psychotic” or “spiteful” or whatever else has actually bothered to respond at all to my post earlier this afternoon at 13:40 (a detailed explanation of what steps I’d take most immediately to address the UK’s economic issues, as was demanded) let alone put forward an alternative explaining how they’d fix the problems in the UK economy and put forward an alternative prospectus of economic policies that they believe would mean that productivity and living standards would rise.

It seems that there is little interest at all in even discussing proposed solutions, only insulting and disparaging people even if they are complete strangers on the internet and making up things to try to discredit them: no engagement whatsoever with any kind of economic discussion about ways to improve things. Very depressing, and precisely why the UK economy is screwed.

Stunning.

For all the wrong reasons.

We are not being screwed by who you think we are. I think the irony and lack of self-awareness on display throughout parts of this thread speaks for itself on that one...

A bit of projection going on here.

Did you put forward any proposed solutions of your own? Perhaps I missed your alternative suggestion of economic policies and explanation of why these would be more effective than those I suggested… perhaps it got lost amongst your reams of personal insults directed at me and you could highlight it for us all, as I’ve looked again and I still can’t see any constructive policy proposals from you.

BIossomtoes · 26/05/2026 15:25

Why should people substantially poorer than these pensioners be being hammered with the highest tax rates in peacetime in history

The standard basic rate of income tax was 41.25% the year I started work with NI on top. Just the taxation element was more than higher earners currently pay.

I very politely asked you what the evidence is that boomers have a lifetime deficit of £200k and millennials have a £300k surplus but you ignored me. Would you do me the kindness of providing that evidence, please?

DrRylandGrace · 26/05/2026 15:43

Katypp · 24/05/2026 19:48

Complete nonsense.
The pension is going to disappear in 20 years or so? Engage brain.
You are right - young people have no money. They never have any money. There is nothing unique about today's young families having no money. It was ever thus.
So who is going to bail your generation out then?
Because on one hand there is baying for pensioners to be punished for relying on the state pension, yet on the other you are excusing younger people for not making any of their own arrangements.

Wrong. Look at the economic data which shows an enormous drop in living standards. Young people aren’t just poorer because they are younger. They are poorer than their parents were on average at the same age, and will continue to be so throughout their lives unless our economic policies change so that there is investment in productive areas of the economy to generate growth (without yet more taxes defeating any prospect of achieving this objective), and therefore living standards can start to rise again and there will be a much-needed period of real-terms salary increases after two decades of barely any change at all, which is unprecedented in recorded economic history, as is each generation now being poorer than the one before it at the same age. The “cake” needs to grow. Nothing else will fix the problem. Trying to divide up the crumbs into ever smaller portions to be shared out will not help remotely, nor will creating false scapegoats <insert the EU, asylum seekers, disabled children or adults etc. depending on the news articles published at age 8 reading level in the current week>, none of whom have any impact of significance on the UK’s economic prospects or fiscal position in terms of magnitude compared to the issues I posted about yesterday).

We need growth and rising productivity. The reasons why this isn’t happening are clear. There are solutions that could be implemented to address them. If we do then everyone’s living standards can start to rise again. If we don’t then the decline will continue.

DrRylandGrace · 26/05/2026 15:44

BIossomtoes · 26/05/2026 15:25

Why should people substantially poorer than these pensioners be being hammered with the highest tax rates in peacetime in history

The standard basic rate of income tax was 41.25% the year I started work with NI on top. Just the taxation element was more than higher earners currently pay.

I very politely asked you what the evidence is that boomers have a lifetime deficit of £200k and millennials have a £300k surplus but you ignored me. Would you do me the kindness of providing that evidence, please?

You do have access to the internet, I presume, given you are posting here?

As stated previously there are multiple detailed economic large-scale data studies on this matter which have also been reported in multiple national newspapers if you don’t like having to deal with the formulas and academic language in the original papers published in journals and accessible via pubmed etc.

DrRylandGrace · 26/05/2026 15:50

crossedlines · 25/05/2026 22:15

A lot of sense here

😆

And ^^ therein lies the problem that’s been highlighted!

DrRylandGrace · 26/05/2026 15:53

Papyrophile · 26/05/2026 08:35

Catching up on last night's contributions. Big thanks to everyone for their carefully worded and constructive thoughts, and for the insights into other people's lives. We're running out of thread here, but I wish we could forward this to every politician and civil servant in a senior role.

Thank you for your reasonable and constructive comments on this thread, it has been refreshing to see amongst all of the dross.

BIossomtoes · 26/05/2026 16:04

DrRylandGrace · 26/05/2026 15:44

You do have access to the internet, I presume, given you are posting here?

As stated previously there are multiple detailed economic large-scale data studies on this matter which have also been reported in multiple national newspapers if you don’t like having to deal with the formulas and academic language in the original papers published in journals and accessible via pubmed etc.

So could you please link to one. As an academic you must be used to providing citations.

DrRylandGrace · 26/05/2026 16:06

DrRylandGrace · 26/05/2026 15:44

You do have access to the internet, I presume, given you are posting here?

As stated previously there are multiple detailed economic large-scale data studies on this matter which have also been reported in multiple national newspapers if you don’t like having to deal with the formulas and academic language in the original papers published in journals and accessible via pubmed etc.

And again, @blossomtoes it is well documented that the overall tax level now which isn’t just about headline tax rates, but stealth taxes, thresholds comparable to similar levels of earnings in real-terms (e.g. The higher rate tax threshold would now start at over £100k if it had been uprated with inflation each year, which is an automatic legal requirement UNLESS the Goverment gets a mandate to change it, in some countries) tax reliefs (remember MIRAS?!), etc. To compare the level of tax in total is necessary rather than just an anecdata comment about the taxes you personally happened to pay, without any context of what salary that occupation would earn now in real terms, total tax paid, the standard of living achievable after deduction for people with the SAME occupation you had at the same stage of life and how much disposable income in real-terms they had left after paying housing costs, tax, essential bills.

It is an evidenced fact that the tax burden is higher now than it’s ever been in the last ~80 years since the end of the second world war. On top of falling living standards. And every time it’s raised further living standards drop again because it creates more unemployment, more health costs and housing issues, more welfare dependency, more people falling below the poverty line because their incomes aren’t keeping pace with inflation.

If we want things to change we must address the underlying causes of the economic malaise which are: unnecessary self-imposed trade barriers, ongoing underfunding of education and infrastructure investment and totally incompetent management and design of those systems, the need to completely redesign our tax system to reduce distortions and cliff edges, the need to totally redesign our healthcare, social care and pensions models to make them fit for the 21st century and economically sustainable so that they don’t strip all other areas of spending of what they require, and the need to have a proper industrial strategy (all of which I explained in more detail in my post setting out specific policy changes that would be a good first step towards achieving the above by taking the most obvious measures that are needed and well evidenced from other countries that they actually work, hence their living standards not falling off a cliff like ours have and their incomes in PPP terms rising annually in comparison to ours, when they used to be similar not too long ago).

The UK has a serious case of ostrich syndrome. It doesn’t need to reinvent the wheel. There are systems with superior outcomes to ours which have been demonstrate in the real world in similar countries to achieve far superior outcomes. What we need to do, obviously, is emulate them. There’s a reason nobody’s copying the UK welfare, healthcare, pensions systems, industrial strategy (LOL) etc. It’s really not that difficult to look around the world, see what has been proved to work and emulate it here, if people DID actually want to stop getting poorer year after year. Sadly, instead, the UK populace seems determined to continually vote for an even worse/ more incompetent Government every time there is an election and if it continues to do so it can hardly pretend to be surprised at the outcome.

BIossomtoes · 26/05/2026 16:08

You could have provided the link I requested in a fraction of the time it took you to post all that.

january1244 · 26/05/2026 16:23

I saw that scrapping the triple lock would save c.£19bn a year in ten years, increasing to up to £38 bn a year in twenty years. That would be a huge saving, and to me much fairer than means testing the state pension. Also means testing anything always seems to drive adverse behaviours, same as the cliff edges in taxation, or free childcare hours, as people seek to avoid it.

I do think the NHS needs reform. I work with many different nationalities, my partner is from another country, and so are multiple friends. Not one of them thinks the NHS is any good. The majority of these have a model where you part insure or pay in, part funded. Some refuse to use the NHS at all, either going home for treatment or paying privately.

A very easy win for the government would be removing the cliff edges in taxation and benefits - it really damages productivity and actively encourages people to work less or overpay into pensions.

Papyrophile · 26/05/2026 17:22

The jobbing accountants on this thread, like @Badbadbunny, have agreed with me here and elsewhere, that governments and civil servants of all political complexions need to get over their distaste for small businesses (which employ circa 60% of the UK's employees). Then encourage them and people like them and the banks to take the risk of investing in the next stage of growth. If they could do so without subjecting the local pasty shop to the same costly industrial food hygiene standards as our local big employer, which supplies most of the savoury baked goods sold in supermarket chill cabinets as well as its own brand goods which are bought by the tonne (hot and cold) on petrol filling station forecourts from Lands End to Inverness.

My little fishmonger's former taramasalata supplier (an ex-restaurateur with near-Michelin status) just retired when told that he needed to relocate to industrial premises to continue. To ramp up production from the 10kg he produced weekly to 100kg would have involved packaging and filling facilities, and someone to market the product, at which point someone would have pressured him for a better price, which would have involved compromising on quality.

I think the following article, dating back to November 2024, is probably past the paywall, but it explains the pitfalls.
My brewery, Timothy Taylor’s, succeeds despite Whitehall, not because of it

My brewery, Timothy Taylor’s, succeeds despite Whitehall, not because of it

Our brewery will not be able to absorb all of Rachel Reeves’s new costs — and we won’t be the only ones

https://www.thetimes.com/uk/politics/article/my-brewery-timothy-taylors-succeeds-despite-whitehall-not-because-of-it-qr7zq98jc

BIossomtoes · 26/05/2026 17:49

To be fair @Papyrophile, jobbing accountants are always going to agree with you because their clients are small businesses so they’re biased.

Plenty of small food businesses manage to conform to food regulations and I’d be pretty pissed off if they didn’t. Who wants to pay the inevitably inflated prices they charge and then go down with food poisoning? It would hardly benefit the business either.

Papyrophile · 26/05/2026 17:58

That's perfectly fair comment @BIossomtoes. Of course, food regulations need to be observed and no decent business wants to poison their customers. But if they didn't kill anyone working on a domestic scale, why would you think their hygiene standards should lapse on a slightly larger scale?

But it's less that aspect that inhibits growth than the difficulty of finding the few thousand pounds to tool up to take the next steps, particularly when you add in the extra administrators you have to hire. The banks aren't interested anymore because there is no branch left.

BIossomtoes · 26/05/2026 18:08

It’s interesting because there’s a small family bakery about 30 miles north of us that produces amazing bread and cake, we actually used to go specially to buy their wares for special occasions. Suddenly they opened a shop in our nearest town a couple of years ago which is pretty much sold out by lunch time most days, despite it being far from cheap. Clever placement - it’s bang next door to Waitrose.

It must be possible for businesses to expand despite all the handicaps. All their products travel down the A1 every day too.

Katypp · 26/05/2026 18:18

BIossomtoes · 26/05/2026 18:08

It’s interesting because there’s a small family bakery about 30 miles north of us that produces amazing bread and cake, we actually used to go specially to buy their wares for special occasions. Suddenly they opened a shop in our nearest town a couple of years ago which is pretty much sold out by lunch time most days, despite it being far from cheap. Clever placement - it’s bang next door to Waitrose.

It must be possible for businesses to expand despite all the handicaps. All their products travel down the A1 every day too.

I used to run a small food business. We went bust a few years ago now. We were completely strangled by legislation and standards and people employed by the council and standards agencies who had no concept of risk/cost analysis and the realities of running a small business.
Eg H&S who wanted us to invest £15k on a piece of equipment to enable staff to lift one heavy bag of flour a week. Our turnover at the time was roughly £200k and we employed six, including ourselves. If staff were dealing with dozens of 25kg sacks a day fair enough, but for one a week?
Or the auditor who wanted us to scrap £10k worth of packaging because we had the proportion of minor ingredients (not allegens) printed wrongly on the packet.

Badbadbunny · 26/05/2026 18:38

BIossomtoes · 26/05/2026 15:25

Why should people substantially poorer than these pensioners be being hammered with the highest tax rates in peacetime in history

The standard basic rate of income tax was 41.25% the year I started work with NI on top. Just the taxation element was more than higher earners currently pay.

I very politely asked you what the evidence is that boomers have a lifetime deficit of £200k and millennials have a £300k surplus but you ignored me. Would you do me the kindness of providing that evidence, please?

But you're forgetting "earned income relief" that was in force for 2/3 years during that time, and that it was 41.25% for only about six years, quickly falling firstly to mid 30s then to low 30s.

Also that lots of other taxes we suffer today didn't exist or were a lot lower, such as VAT starting at 8% against the current 20%, plus much smaller fuel duties, and other taxes like landfill tax, insurance tax, air passenger tax, etc simply didn't exist, along with stamp duty, and of course employers NIC was a lot lower.

You really can't just "cherry pick" one tax when the entire tax regime has changed out of all recognition over the past 50-60 years.

Badbadbunny · 26/05/2026 18:43

BIossomtoes · 26/05/2026 17:49

To be fair @Papyrophile, jobbing accountants are always going to agree with you because their clients are small businesses so they’re biased.

Plenty of small food businesses manage to conform to food regulations and I’d be pretty pissed off if they didn’t. Who wants to pay the inevitably inflated prices they charge and then go down with food poisoning? It would hardly benefit the business either.

It's not just "jobbing accountants", it's the various trade bodies, the federation of small business, huge numbers of small businesses themselves, etc. As a poster upthread said, small businesses are the biggest employers in the UK yet don't have a voice in Parliament as they're constantly ignored in favour of the big businesses (who often employ ex-politicians in lucrative roles after leaving Parliament) - funny that! We really need to start valuing small businesses more. Everyone seems to hate the millionaires and billionaires and the multinationals taking over everything, and there's a clear and obvious alternative which is to actually support small business rather than kill them which is clearly what the "Big boys" want so they can line their pockets even more.

BIossomtoes · 26/05/2026 19:20

Badbadbunny · 26/05/2026 18:38

But you're forgetting "earned income relief" that was in force for 2/3 years during that time, and that it was 41.25% for only about six years, quickly falling firstly to mid 30s then to low 30s.

Also that lots of other taxes we suffer today didn't exist or were a lot lower, such as VAT starting at 8% against the current 20%, plus much smaller fuel duties, and other taxes like landfill tax, insurance tax, air passenger tax, etc simply didn't exist, along with stamp duty, and of course employers NIC was a lot lower.

You really can't just "cherry pick" one tax when the entire tax regime has changed out of all recognition over the past 50-60 years.

It was still six years of seeing literally half your pay disappear before you got it. Stamp duty has existed for well over a century and applied to cheques as well as property until decimalisation. Air passenger tax is a relatively new tax simply because until package holidays were introduced barely anyone flew. However you try and frame it taxation has been swings and roundabouts in different eras. What matters to most people is the amount in their pay packet and it’s considerably higher proportion now than it was then.

IsEveryUserNameBloodyTaken · 26/05/2026 19:53

Badbadbunny · 26/05/2026 18:38

But you're forgetting "earned income relief" that was in force for 2/3 years during that time, and that it was 41.25% for only about six years, quickly falling firstly to mid 30s then to low 30s.

Also that lots of other taxes we suffer today didn't exist or were a lot lower, such as VAT starting at 8% against the current 20%, plus much smaller fuel duties, and other taxes like landfill tax, insurance tax, air passenger tax, etc simply didn't exist, along with stamp duty, and of course employers NIC was a lot lower.

You really can't just "cherry pick" one tax when the entire tax regime has changed out of all recognition over the past 50-60 years.

True, I remember a time when VAT wasn’t charged on home energy bills at all.
When they brought it in you could pay an advance on your bills so you wouldn’t be charged VAT for the amount you paid in advance.

Papyrophile · 26/05/2026 20:02

We live a few miles between two towns, on the Devon Cornwall border. It's a farming area, mostly livestock. The smaller of the two towns is dominated by a very large national business that makes pasties and pies and savoury baked products, plus a Tesco, a health centre and a large comprehensive. Those are the local employment options. There's plenty of articulated delivery lorries too. But very few jobs are of interest to anyone with ambition or education.

The other town is much prettier, nicer houses, concert space, bowls club. It has four supermarkets, and two petrol stations so food prices are competitive. It also has a huge farmer's market, and a dozen or more specialist food retailers -- a cheesemonger, three independent butchers, a fishmonger, a Mediterranean delicatessen and it's the base for one of the most successful wine merchants in the Southwest. Very small branches of national chain stores. It's actually famous as the town where McDonalds failed. People go there at the weekend to buy fresh food. The comprehensive is huge, serving almost 300 sq miles. What is one town doing right and the other getting wrong? We have a lot of new housing being built in both towns. It sounds really petty but one town permits on street parking in the town centre for an hour, free. The county council want to change that, but so far the community has fought it off.

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