Your comments section is full of insane right wing economic bullshit, do you know? its quite embarrassing
@currysauce-ft3yf2 күн бұрын
only say you,millions are calm hahaaaa
@DewiSant-o3yКүн бұрын
Do a video on why people who are from Anglo Norman stock moan so much about immigration when they themselves come from immigration a thousand years ago
@Fab666.3 күн бұрын
In a nutshell our government is incompetent, they wear a tie and suit, have a cv from Eaton and Oxford, and speak with vigour and passion about their party and what they can do… But they’re still completely incompetent. The fact that we have allowed the same 2 parties to rule for a century (different names) is in my opinion the root cause of this lack of talent.
@bopndop2347Күн бұрын
The truth is British people have got complacent and naive. They love the Eatonites, go watch every podcast interview of Kwarteng or Blair and see how much they lap up the smooth talk. It's all romance and sweet talk and the British love it!
@eruketo39694 күн бұрын
When people need to pay 50% of their salary as rent, no economic growth can be expected. So many cases in the world.
@serverthanos4 күн бұрын
It really is as simple as that
@erongi2334 күн бұрын
So debt rises further, providing grist for the mill for the bankers who thrive in a debt-sodden environment.
@ScarySox3 күн бұрын
High interest rates + inflation means no money left after paying the bills.🤬
@prebenpetersen59822 күн бұрын
Funny thing is that often too low housing tax is one reason for high costs, the next thing is government money printing and banks lending up to the roof in housing. So it is in the short term very unpopular to do something about it. But in the long run it is the best investment a nation can do. Only a few nations in Europe have had a strict policy on this. And together with complete stupid policy on energy, Europe therefor is doomed.
@purplerisc4 күн бұрын
As always, simply an expertly put together video on a specific topic. Not only do you manage to make it understandable to those who may not have studied economics and other similar subjects, but you also manage to give it enough depth that those who have studied the subject can get something concrete out of it. Brilliant channel. Keep up the fantastic content!
@BioHazardCL45 күн бұрын
The UK is a carehome, the UK goverment is a carehome operator, local councils are the carehome staff. Turning the UK into a carehome is bankrupting the UK.
@freemanol5 күн бұрын
If you're not educating and training people to be productive, then make housing so expensive to boost GDP on paper but that everyone spends more than half of their salaries on rent, then no wonder the country is turning into a carehome. I left the UK in 2020 back to my country, each passing year the UK makes me happy i made that decision
@blimbag5 күн бұрын
The Tories broke Britain with their stupid Brexit
@stefnirk5 күн бұрын
@@blimbag No, the trend has been clear for ages; this was going to happen, Brexit or not.
@wind.del.change5 күн бұрын
its a gulag
@rogermanvell46935 күн бұрын
Actually the average age in the Uk at 40 is younger than most other European countries and we spend a lot less on care and pensions for the elderly than most of them too. The problems are many but too many old people is much less of an issue here than elsewhere.
@njr12224 күн бұрын
The point is to make everyone poorer except for the wealthiest and most insulated. The devastation has been decades in the making.
@PakistanIcecream0005 күн бұрын
To say that the quality of UK public services has dropped in the last couple of years is an understatement. Crappy doctor appointment waiting times, overpriced non-punctual public transport, tripled supermarket food prices, commercialized education, useless consumer rights organizations and charities with lofty business goals.
@yif2174 күн бұрын
Be lucky to get a phone appointment then they tell you to send picture in for them to examine but the pictures cannot be over 8mp and they can’t see it , absolute shambles
@charlesbruggmann79094 күн бұрын
What do supermarket prices have to do with public services?
@TheLukeLambert3 күн бұрын
@@charlesbruggmann7909 When they're making record-breaking profits year on year, since Covid, and their workers can hardly afford their own rents and ordinary lives, then yes, it becomes a problem.
@Anna-t7l2 күн бұрын
@@charlesbruggmann7909Wakey, wakey!!!!!
@andrewharris39003 сағат бұрын
You spend less at the supermarket as a percentage of your wages than at most points in history. The thing that is increasing more than anything is the cost of the UK Government, it's a parasite we can no longer afford to feed.
@jamaicantillidie66265 күн бұрын
I was working on Wall Street in NYC in the 1990s and early 2000s, when the talk of the town was the EU and the UK. Everyone wanted a slice of the EU and the road to that slice went right through England. American companies and companies globally started repositioning themselves, using the UK as a diving platform from which to enter the EU. Entire departments packed up and move to the UK, people were given the option to move with it or get left behind. I remember when our datacenter migrated to the UK, a big fancy building in Canary Wharf. Then came Brexit and exit stage left.
@Phucket245 күн бұрын
Yes and the EU has been in a mess since Brexit, one day the UK will get better the EU is finished
@VincentRE795 күн бұрын
Yes but we had to get out of the EU, how would you feel if your country was being controlled by Brussels.
@baz11844 күн бұрын
@@VincentRE79we were controlling Brussels just as much as they were controlling us. We had veto powers, nothing happened without us approving it. Now the Tories have lost their scapegoat and they didn't even attempt to achieve anything in all the years succeeding the referendum.
@jamaicantillidie66264 күн бұрын
@@Phucket24 Delusional
@jamaicantillidie66264 күн бұрын
@@VincentRE79 That your country was not being controlled by Brussels. That was a bag a lies by Brexiters. The UK has voted ‘No’ to laws passed at EU on 56 occasions, abstained 70 times, and voted ‘Yes’ 2,466 times. The UK was on the “winning side” 95% of the time, abstained 3% of the time, and were on the losing side only 2%. You call that control?
@jakeforrest4 күн бұрын
I am danish, and if the standard of the danish health system is that it is run by “ A state of art IT system” then I feel really sorry for the citizens in UK. We Danes have had endless problems with the IT system, and we are currently building several so-called super hospitals, and that process has been met with an endless amount of scandals and problems. Sometimes people here in Denmark say: If you want to find out how well functioning everything here is after all, just try to go abroad for a while ! Maybe that statement is true ….?
@TheNicoliyah4 күн бұрын
That’s a great saying😂
@prebenpetersen59822 күн бұрын
Your last statement is true. The amount of negligence and sloppy administration in various European nations is hard to believe. So in those terms you can say the danish IT systems are magnificent. But still lacks a lot to wish for. But the UK’s problem is to some extend also insane migration which means it is tough even getting a doctors appointment within months. Denmark you get in within the week regardless how small your problem is.
@TheNicoliyah2 күн бұрын
@@jakeforrest I think that a large part of the UKs problems with getting doctors appointments are 14 years of being run into the ground by the Tories. I am sure immigration has played a role but it’s not the key one.
@ZukiasКүн бұрын
i had a doctors appointment a few years ago, and the doctor was still using Windows Vista.... That is the state of play in the UK.
@_Unlukey5 күн бұрын
The last generation borrowed to keep their taxes low and now it's the workers of today who are paying for their retirement. The interest on the debt alone is more than our entire defense budget. I wouldn't mind paying more tax if I though it was an investment in the future but it would be spent maintaining the triple lock for the same generation that squandered the North Sea oil profits and voted to borrow. All while the retirement prospects for today's workers look to be non existent.
@jonnyc4294 күн бұрын
That same generation then desperately try to point the finger at immigration and refugees, as well as the younger generation, rather than accept responsibility
@randomcomputer7248Күн бұрын
we are screwed. Get out of major towns and grow some of your own food if you can.
@fayemiller85Күн бұрын
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@fayemiller85Күн бұрын
AARONT44 🚀🚀🚀🚀🚀🚀
@NoeliaTyrellКүн бұрын
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@royalsdaveКүн бұрын
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@JoBo3015 күн бұрын
Excellent video indeed my good man. Just goes to show that the smaller our governments and the less power and tax we give to our politicians, they better our lives will be.
@shaydza5 күн бұрын
The UK is an ageing society. You cannot look at how things were run in the past to find ideal solutions. New ones need to be found. You cannot have a massive amount of retirees vs the past but expect services to remain where they were. However I do agree that government overreach is a problem. But is any government in the UK running on reducing government involvement in your lives?
@BioHazardCL45 күн бұрын
Pensioners can't expect to retire and live a comfy life on the taxes of the young. Carehomes are so expensive and pensioners need to pay more in their houses, giving up their pensions to pay for it and everyone needs to be told that living to 90 is a real posibility and it's extremely expensive!
@IshtarNike5 күн бұрын
This is only half true. Yes, there are fewer working age people, but we are also far more productive per capita than we used to be. If certain things like care homes were nationalised it would be cheaper over all because of the economy of scale.
@wind.del.change5 күн бұрын
im not old though.
@hobbabobba79125 күн бұрын
@IshtarNike so your solution to government overreach is more government overreach...
@loc47255 күн бұрын
@@hobbabobba7912I don't think you understand what government overreach actually is.
@WeShallOvercome_4 күн бұрын
Isn’t life expectancy mainly affected by lifestyle and diet, not the bandaid we put on the problem afterwards?
@Fab666.3 күн бұрын
We follow a very American model, and get very American results
@SubjectiveFunny5 күн бұрын
We are spending over £8b on "irregular" migrants every year. That is not the cause of our problems, but it is a pretty significant representation of why we are where we are. Lawyers and politicians are getting rich, everyone else is getting rinsed.
@paulinskipukprogressive49035 күн бұрын
This is utter nonsense Migrants have always been a net financial benefit because they pay more in taxes than they consume in benefits Check for yourself
@BananaBananaBanana-y3k5 күн бұрын
do you have the tax figures for those migrants? estimates across their life will do..
@iian0505 күн бұрын
I have a theory on immigration. It was a hot topic of the Brexit argument, yet we saw the highest immigration figures ever in the period POST Brexit, when it should've decreased, per the wishes of so many pro Brexit voters. The theory is that at a high level our govts understand that we need care based labour for our aging population, which is typically a low paying industry. Our domestic population is largely unwilling to enter that area due to poor working conditions and low pay, so the borders are effectively but somewhat subtly opened to allow a care workforce to enter and manage our aging population. One that is willing to work for lower wages due to coming from areas of lower opportunities. It's anecdotal, but in my area, we've seen a huge increase in foreign nations working in elderly care based roles. But this isn't publicised, because immigration is such a hot topic.
@charlesbruggmann79095 күн бұрын
@@iian050 Just a reminder Sajid Javid (and Rishi?) supported Brexit specifically because the EU was unfair to ‘people like them’. Then, given the structural labour shortages in Britain, the plan was always to import workers from the ‘Commonwealth’ - in practice, India and Nigeria of course.
@BananaBananaBanana-y3k4 күн бұрын
@@iian050 its not just elderly care. its the low wage service sector, healthcare, prisons, so many other industries and institutions where british wages have fallen behind what british people want to work for (this has been an intentional wage suppression for the sake of increased asset values). someone has to fill the gap. left or right, governments are going to not reduce immigration because if they do, our social order will collapse as all these important low pay jobs do not get done. i get that people on the right are scared of people who dont look or sound like them, but sometimes you have to overcome your fears for the better of you, your family and your country.
@rogerbartlet57205 күн бұрын
People of UK do your duty: Have lots of kids you can't afford so that the government can keep it's welfare gravy train running!
@markquarrington50015 күн бұрын
High property prices do not equal affluence, it just drains the other parts of the economy.
@wind.del.change5 күн бұрын
too late now.
@rogermanvell46935 күн бұрын
yes we make very bad use of our private investments housing is an example of this.
@peterwait6415 күн бұрын
When banks started creating new digital money to loan for mortgages instead of lending savings prices were bound to increase.
@wind.del.change5 күн бұрын
@@peterwait641 they bloated like a corpse.
@prebenpetersen59822 күн бұрын
Yup, in those regards a relatively high tax on housing and property is recommendable. It puts a lit on prices for the benefit of the rest of the economy. In general housing should rise in line with productivity increase
@ERobbins12345 күн бұрын
Get council houses built and many of our problems will be solved. Reduce housing costs and more people will be able to afford private pensions and private healthcare.
@Keltik0ne5 күн бұрын
The problem being the next Con government will sell them off, creating a new generation of Con voters but cycling the problem back to the beginning.
@charlesbruggmann79095 күн бұрын
You will, of course, be happy to pay extra tax to finance this?
@ERobbins12345 күн бұрын
@ Building council houses will be an excellent investment for country, and therefore can be funded through borrowing.
@charlesbruggmann79095 күн бұрын
@ It can only be called ‘investment’ if profitable. So rents will have to be high enough to cover the cost of the land, construction, finance and maintenance. Probably not what most hope for.
@ERobbins12345 күн бұрын
@@charlesbruggmann7909 The cost of land is a one-off payment, whereas rent will be paid in perpetuity, therefore the cost will obviously be recouped eventually. Even if owning council houses is unprofitable, the benefits to the economy of having a functional housing system will be massive.
@marcusmoonstein2425 күн бұрын
Government is a monopoly that has no real competition, and so suffers from all the consequent problems one would expect. Inefficiency, bureaucratic bloat, impossible-to-fire workers, lack of accountability to customers, etc - all while charging monopoly prices to taxpayers.
@tancreddehauteville7643 күн бұрын
83% on social care is shocking! The government should focus on that, not local authorities. We need to have a social care tax and proper funding for this. Taxes MUST rise in order to fund essential services.
@Psybx-r4gКүн бұрын
Could it be that the currency itself is being devalued, while wages are stagnant, so the government needs to collect more and more of the worthless fiat currency just to stand still? It’s basically the flip side of everything getting more expensive. What if it’s just the currency getting less valuable? A good point of reference to support this is that 1oz of gold stills buys you 1 nice tailored suit. But in fiat terms both of those things are vastly more expensive now than they were 20 years ago. Food for thought at least.
@BasedLibertarianZ2 күн бұрын
Denmark has 250% of private debt to gdp ratio. The economy is a boiling pot. And mortgages are insane other there.
@bradtenbongaКүн бұрын
Outstanding insights , thank you . BradTen 🏴
@vvwalker72615 күн бұрын
This is the problem with UK politics. We need parties to either set out the case for Denmark model or set out the case for a US model and then deliver. It seems the UK is not capable of doing anything these days and that has resulted in stagnation
@CuriousCrow-mp4cx5 күн бұрын
Lol. Models are maps, not the territory. Don't confuse the two. We are neither the US nor Denmark. And thinking we can borrow models devised for other economies has brought us to the situation we are now in. Neoliberalism was devised in America, but it hasn't even worked there. And unfortunately for us, we dived into copying the Americans and ended up with a busted flush. All we got was a huge transfer of wealth to the already asset-wealthy, and a crumbling system brought down by savage underinvestment in education and industry and underfunding of public services. British workers work the longest hours in Europe, but are paid the least to the extent that Polish and Slovenian workers will earn more than the workers of the sixth richest economy in the world, leading to increasing income and wealth inequality. They say one's problems come from one's priorities, and if one doesn't like cleaning up the mess caused by one's problems, then one needs to take a hard look at the priorities that put them there. We've made rich people richer at our own expense. That is not just folly on the part of our short-termist politicians. We've played our part in electing them. So we too are responsible for losing our own way. It is our priorities that are skewed away from reality. Until we look at the truth of who we are without rosy glasses and unicorns, and commit to making the changes needed, we're not going anywhere, because we have to change before it will. We need to stop looking for easy answers to tough problems and commit to change. Because being Denmark is not a quick fix. It is literally changing not just our minds but the way we do things. And not just moaning at governments, scapegoating, and blaming. None of which achieves anything. But getting more involved in how our country is run. Our errors are rooted in how we see the world and ourselves in it. That distorts our relationship to reality. Nice things cost time, effort, and money to produce. Denmark didn't get nice things by thinking their national economy is run like a household. And even though they encourage people to grow wealth, they are not shy in taxing it to pay for the things that make it possible to have nice things. We don't subsidise wealth creation to make a few people rich and nothing else. We do it to ensure that everyone's boat can float to the extent that everyone is able to contribute to making wealth for the country as a whole. We have spectacularly failed for nearly half a century to do what we did after World War Two, when we were 100% worse off than we are now. Why? We followed the American overoptimistic model, and it's hurt us badly. We are now reaping the rewards of that folly. We can do better, but we are too complacent and are deceiving ourselves. We have found out that we need to change. We sat by as whole communities fell to the neoliberal attrition. And then no one can understand why they can't build themselves up, as the whole weight of the Big Con is standing on them.
@loc47255 күн бұрын
Gary of GarysEconomics put it nicely when he said we have a Uniparty system. The problem is both political options are to a greater or lesser extent brought and when the public were given the chance to start to break this up (the A.V. referendum) they voted to keep the current, corrupt and broken system. And without even the will for structural reform we are well and truly fu...
@jakeforrest4 күн бұрын
@@loc4725 I am danish, and we have a system with several political parties . When you voted no to rethink your political system, I felt very sorry for you.. I agree completely with what you have written about the UK system. The danish system with several political parties may not be perfect, but at least the winner doesn’t take it all, and to achieve something you have to work it out with other political parties , which creates a lot of dynamics.
@celiacresswell69092 күн бұрын
@@CuriousCrow-mp4cxare you really sure we are living in a neocon system? We have the highest tax burden since post war years, with regulation and government intrusion which would amaze any previous era, as well as expectations of what government can deliver never seen before. Sounds like you may have fallen for the map, and are not seeing the landscape
@saiyedakhtar3931Күн бұрын
@CuriousCrow-mp4cx "hasn't even worked there". A bunch of nonsense. It's worked well for America. The US economy is still the envy of the world and Europe is going the way of the Dodo. What brilliant innovations amd companies does Europe have to drive it through the 21st century? NOTHING. NOTHING. NOTHING. Europe is just a bloated bureaucracy to redistribute wealth accumulated in the last century. At one point the wealth will run out without good growth.
@harlyslamm28885 күн бұрын
The biggest problem with our government is to tax more, and to continue taxing us more, it has to waste more aswell! There is no obligation for other tax payers to pay for people incompetence! It has no obligation to fund other peoples lifestyle!
@swojnowski4535 күн бұрын
There is no such thing as people's incompetence. Our power structures are all trees. Only 10% succeeds, the rest are losers. It is not the people, it is the system. Those at the top will always say, you are not at the top because you are incompetent, the truth is there is no room for great majority of people there. As you reach 40s or 50s you are no longer able to compete against most younger people, unless you are in power structure already. The only thing that counts is how deep up the ass of those who have power you have gone to get what you want. Most of your incompetent ones, just do not do that, because not many humans enjoy flowing through shit half of their life.
@hughjohns91105 күн бұрын
Let's not forget the legendary wastage of money in the public sector. Its fine saying the govt spends x or y on healthcare, police or whatever, but how much of that goes up in smoke through bureaucracy and non-jobs?
@BananaBananaBanana-y3k5 күн бұрын
in the private sector, the waste is in the boardroom
@l3eatalphal3eatalpha5 күн бұрын
It is this kind of unfocused, generic comment that could have been written at any time since 1950 that is part of the problem. As you say it is a legend, even though there is truth in it the function is to invoke dissatisfaction. Most of the serious economic and organisational analysis gets ignored.
@hughjohns91105 күн бұрын
@ even if that were true, they are not wasting public money.
@hughjohns91105 күн бұрын
@ you can woffle and bluster all you like, it does not make it untrue and it still sucks up money that could be spent on healthcare, roads etc etc. My comment is not part if the problem, the subject of my comment is. It’s not rocket science.
@BananaBananaBanana-y3k5 күн бұрын
@@hughjohns9110 you're suggesting one is morally worse. public services and private services should both be ran competently as they both impact the public, whether paid for with public or private funds. failure to properly manage staffing costs (including your execs) to a degree that it threatens the continuation of he business is incompetence and potentially corrupt - just as is doing the same in the public sector.
@chriswills94375 күн бұрын
The UK’s tax authority has not fined a single “enabler” of offshore tax evasion or non-compliance in five years despite landmark powers introduced in 2017, new figures reveal. HMRC has been under pressure to estimate the size of the tax gap after figures disclosed to the independent thinktank Tax Policy Associates by HMRC in September 2021 revealed that UK taxpayers held nearly £570bn in tax havens. HMRC estimates that it collects 95% of all the tax owed in the UK, but the remaining 5% accounted for about £36bn in lost revenue in 2021-22.
@CreepyTrendMan5 күн бұрын
Mind Your own business.
@tonycollyweston61824 күн бұрын
@@CreepyTrendManlost your marbles?
@davidclark15454 күн бұрын
Moving money is not tax evasion, it is tax avoidance and is legal.
@chriswills94374 күн бұрын
@@davidclark1545 The Paradise Papers (November 2017) contained 13.4 million leaked files that were investigated by 95 media establishments worldwide, and found to contain the details of a large number of individuals and offshore companies who were illegally utilising tax havens to avoid personal and corporation tax. Using a tax haven for monetary gain and neglecting to declare income to HMRC, gives the holder a financial advantage over those who are paying tax correctly, and inhibits economic cooperation and development. Those currently taking advantage of the system in this way are liable to be investigated by HMRC and may be found guilty of non-compliance, resulting in a hefty penalty. So it can be legal if declared, not if not declared and immoral is another question.
@chriswills94374 күн бұрын
The use of tax havens means less tax revenue for the government, leading to an increase in taxes on goods and services, which ultimately hurts the poorest. On top of this, it facilitates money laundering, corruption, and hinders financial regulators to identify risks in capital markets. Using tax havens will only comply with HMRC tax regulations if declared to HMRC.
@JupiterThunder4 күн бұрын
No council should be legally able to get into debt. It should be illegal, with the senior officers having personal criminal liability.
@Alan-ou2id3 күн бұрын
Love your videos, super intelligent and straight to the point
@the_lost_navigator5 күн бұрын
HOTEL UK: There are more Cooks in the Kitchen and more Waiters in the Diner than there is Guests. The Management has taken over most Floors, and the Cusstomers can't get a seat to eat because all the chairs are filled with fat-ass Bureaucrats... but there are Bugs to eat in the Dumpsters out back - and if you're lucky - some might be chocolate-coated. Hurry up before those Dumpsters are emptied and converted into temp-housing, though! ;)
@philipwood1235 күн бұрын
As you say. Govt getting bigger but we get less. That's the problem and solution. Cost of oversized govt is too big. Solution smaller govt
@dewiowen30104 күн бұрын
Great informative video. These problems need solutions for our grandchildren not to have to face huge government and private debt. I work with care homes and the costs are unnecessarily large. One solution is to bring these costs down. It can be done.
@physiocrat71434 күн бұрын
Making a commodity available at below market levels is a recipe for queues, shortages, and black markets.
@JLCC20225 күн бұрын
I second this claim. As a migrant who worked as a teacher in my home country, it took me 11 months to get my QTS here with DfE, which people say it's the fastest. My application was just sitting in the queue gathering dust for 10 months as I received email asking for supplementary documents and further verification in month 10. Beforehand, it took a week to respond to my enquiry with no specific details or progress at all. Honestly, in my home country, emails are mostly answered within 24 hours, both in private and public sectors. Other examples include Land Registry (3 months in my home country vs 1-2 years), passport (2 weeks in my home country vs 3 months here), fixing poleholes (almost never had one vs forever to fix here)... the list goes on and on The bureaucracy of the UK government makes things really inefficient. In the end, the citizens and our economy suffer.
@oiausdlkasuldhflaksjdhoiausydo5 күн бұрын
Let’s be honest, paying people for existing. That’s how social democracy has been running and now they can’t stop but they must.
@wind.del.change5 күн бұрын
they have bred a whole generation of dependents. lol.
@Citizen-of-theworld4 күн бұрын
These are very insightful videos about the UK economy and fascinating to see. Thank you for your contribution. It’s tough to be asked to keep paying higher taxes with no real context as to why they never result in meaningful improvements. Countries like Japan and Switzerland seem to get the best bang for their buck. I wonder what we can do to improve. Somehow I think culture and work ethic play a big part in these differences, and I think changing that is really very challenging.
@daveseville67713 күн бұрын
Excellent video. Thank you
@wilsonmanch67735 күн бұрын
Stop hiring those incompetent and unqualified managers and CEOs and ministers who think sitting on government jobs is a safe haven and doesn’t need performance or any pressure, and still rake in hundred of thousand annual in compensation package. Start there and the productivities will increase. Everyone should be performance based and out the door is couldn’t keep up.
@andrewwoodgate37692 күн бұрын
Thank you for this illuminating summary
@gazunkafonegazunkafone34925 күн бұрын
The aim of the state is to either work for the state, or live off it. Either way you are dependant on the state which is exactly what they want.
@erongi2334 күн бұрын
State pensions are always the culprit in the UK. According to an OECD analysis published in 2019, the UK has an overall net replacement rate of 28.4% from mandatory pensions for an average earner (well below the OECD average of 58.6% and the EU average of 63.5%). When voluntary provision (mainly workplace pensions) is included as well, the UK’s net replacement rate rises to 61.0%, while the OECD and EU averages rise to 65.4% and 67.0% respectively. But voluntary pensions in the UK are always fully funded as they come from the private sector. In other countries the much big pensions are funded largely from current taxation. The UK in terms of much of pensions are fully funded from the private sector.
@MrMeneillos4 күн бұрын
Efficiency on spending. Simple as that. The gigantic disaster of HS2 explains itself.
@TobotronPrime5 күн бұрын
Its not called Benefits Britain for no reason
@swojnowski4535 күн бұрын
government helps landlords get their rent on time. Social housing has been in decline for decades, so councils can't get the rents. Restore mass social housing or face downwards spiral. Private rented sector should be a tiny minority and taxed very heavily, but we have the opposite.
@TobotronPrime5 күн бұрын
@@swojnowski453 I agree, but they won't do it because all the parties subscribe to the same economical fallacy - I said on another video on another channel, all they will do is change the 10 to a 12 and the 45 to a 46; government are lazy and incapable of doing what we regard as work, they tinker and that's all they will do until eventually the system collapses and someone does some actual work.
@abbx0223 күн бұрын
Cut 2/3 of all government jobs (excluding front line docs and nursers), double all the salaries, make them have private pension schemes and cut the bottom 1/4 of performers every year . That would be a good start
@gregoryclack84395 күн бұрын
Another point is rentierism; Brett Christophers has written a couple of great books on this.
@Carlos-im3hnСағат бұрын
"Very expensive to provide temporary accommodation" for homeless...yet every month the government invite and allow an Albert Hall full of illegal migrants to cross the channel ! This is madness.
@antonystone-k1r5 күн бұрын
Health care is full of people who don’t do the health care just 50%of the workforce are doctors and nurses
@mattanderson66724 күн бұрын
Excellent analysis Thank you Sir Interesting... very interesting Wonderful discussion
@MrLukealbanese3 сағат бұрын
In the chart at 8:54 ff - I don't see defence. What is that annually?
@nelad4 күн бұрын
Instead of the large versus small state debate, we need to focus on investment to make the state more efficient - private organisations that don't invest and only retrench fail so why do we treat the public sector like this? An example is how poor, means tested social care provided by a postcode lottery patchwork of local authorities results in longer more expensive stays in hospital. The first wave of network connected Information Technology in the late 90s and into the first decade of the 21st century created huge economic growth everywhere and we need to leverage the next wave of tech to do the same to tackle productivity. The NHS is way behind with IT and diagnostics and at the end of the day this is what needs to be funded but they can't do it like the Blair government (big top down IT programmes). Also, the tendency in the UK is to consider cost over quality of life - probably a cultural overhang of the class structure - I don't find this as much in Europe and Australia.
@michaelkoelbl40045 күн бұрын
Thanks for that really good analysis. It sounds like the difference between the approaches is difference between paying the absolute minimum necessary and getting something that just about gets the job done but feels grotty and paying more to get something that does the job well and feels a lot nicer. I'd be interested in knowing why the USA seems to have escaped the decline in economic growth that seems to affected the UK and Europe and if there is anything the UK and Europe can learn from this.
@Zenkrypt5 күн бұрын
on the basis it is the world's reserve currency, so it can easily throw money about.
@roberthuntley10905 күн бұрын
I'm not convinced that the USA has escaped, its just a bit behind us. There have been lots of recent videos on YT about US job layoffs. recruitment freezes and so on. There was one today about MacDonald's there running out of money because customers can't afford to eat out so often. Other indicators are the declining futures price of petrol, and industrial metals like copper. With the Chinese economy on the slide as well, I wouldn't be surprised if we end up with some sort of global recession which will make the UK situation even harder to deal with. We are all doomed.
@IshtarNike5 күн бұрын
It's because they, surprisingly, still believe in government investment at least a bit. Look at the CHIPS act. As far as I know there's no equivalent to that in the UK. We categorically refuse to invest in our own industries. All we do is tinker with things to try to encourage private investment, which doesn't work when business confidence is so low. And it's low because the government refuses to invest first. Contrary to market orthodoxy, government investment can and does crowd IN private sector investment, especially after a down turn like we had in 2008. But instead of investing they chose to cut based on a single, and now debunked, research paper. It's honestly embarrassing. Imagine basing an entire economic strategy on a single researcher.
@موسى_75 күн бұрын
@@IshtarNike Milton Freedman economics
@patrickjay64344 күн бұрын
Take a look at US national debt vs everywhere else in the world... It's astronomical
@DeGuzmanJorge5 күн бұрын
Have the elderly considered they might be living beyond their means? Perhaps they should downsize on their homes and spend less on the red wine and cruises they love so much. I remember when pensioners were war veterans and not the fragile snowflakes crying over having to weather the cold like we have now
@therealjag3 күн бұрын
They always tackle the symptom, never the source. Idiotic governments each time.
@physiocrat71434 күн бұрын
If you have a welfare state paid for out of taxes on wages, goods and services, you have set up a death spiral.
@n99w795 күн бұрын
How can we get better talents to run the government?
@Cancer0us14 күн бұрын
The slide around American national debt rising based on candidate policy seems to be discredited by the graph shown in the previous slide.
@parvuselephantus3 күн бұрын
0:35 - '(...)EVEN Lolipop Ladies (...)' - to me this sentence is a cultural shock. We have such a job in Poland too and yes - it's not the most paid job, but people have much respect to such a people. The way the three words from quote were pronounced kind of reminds me the very reminders of imperialism - the attitude to slaves. Seeing empty libraries (and how nobody reads books anymore) I don't feel surprised to have libraries budget cut. The existence of Lolipop Lady job to me is evidence of somebody's failure (to put proper traffic light in place). Still however these are people securing somebodys children with their own body - I feel more respect should be given than in the 0:35 sentence.
@alansimms2238Күн бұрын
The reason why taxis keep rising because of poor government over the last 20 years
@Harve69885 күн бұрын
For some odd reason I always thought Hampshire was an inland county, never realised Portsmouth was there. You learn something new everyday!
@wind.del.change5 күн бұрын
i always thought sussex was in scotland.
@Binzdogger3 күн бұрын
People have to stop comparing what we could do now to post ww2 recovery. Post ww2 there were 450,000 dead British people who most of whom would have had a house or land, that was either handed down or handed over to the state massively reducing pressure to build new homes so rebuilding and repair could easily take precedent. UK post ww2 recovery was half fueled by American money, debt relief and globalisation, post ww2 recovery was a big boost for almost all countries involved.
@blanne96284 күн бұрын
9:47 - can you give a source for the trump vs harris national debt increase predictions?
@Maksimszz5 күн бұрын
This kinda reminds me of elon musks 'D.O.G.E' Proposal: Department Of Government Efficiency 😂
@johnl53162 күн бұрын
Supply and demand should be the mechanism for building
@GetAngryy3 күн бұрын
I know, let's spend more on gender studies!!!
@johnl53162 күн бұрын
Governments should not be building homes. The independent sector should do that
@Rikitikitawi-x3l4 күн бұрын
£8 million for 15 houses! What have they installed? Toilets made of gold?
@seanbrennan54693 күн бұрын
Here in the US that would be a great deal, expect to pay over a million for a new home as a private citizen if it was a government program probably 10x that
@RichardEnglander5 күн бұрын
20% of the population voted Labour and we are all screwed now. Where are their protests? If i voted for them I'd be livid.
@tonycollyweston61824 күн бұрын
I am very happy, what's the problem?
@Daytona25 күн бұрын
The the trendlines on the charts misleading ? Economic conditions changed dramatically as a result of the credit crunch in 2007-2009. There appears to be one trend rate up to this and, unsurprisingly, a differing rate after.
@paulinskipukprogressive49035 күн бұрын
At 9m10 - your graph of government spending ; Why did you leave out defence/arms spending ?
@edc15695 күн бұрын
Bit odd, it's £52bn for that year.
@slothsarecool4 күн бұрын
NHS waiting lists are crazy and yet they cut alcohol duty haha, surely that’ll help
@Steven-hq3go2 күн бұрын
Alcohol duty for pubs, for alcohol bought in shops it'll go up next year in line with inflation. Junk food is cheap and worse for many people
@johnl53162 күн бұрын
CO2 has reached its saturation point as a molecule relative to temperature, meaning that any more of it can have no notable effect on temperature......see Princeton physicist William Happer on this topic
@frmcf5 күн бұрын
Surely it's normal for the richest council areas also to have the most debt, since they have a higher capacity to borrow. The problem is that you need to increase your population and output in order to continue to service that debt sustainably. If you have a load of debt *and* expenditure rising faster than revenue, *then* you have a problem. Places like Hampshire, as you describe, need to grow their working-age population.
@swojnowski4535 күн бұрын
You can't beat something that that grows exponentially with something that grows linearly longer term. Debt longer term is something that will break any neck. Once you in it, you are on your way to collapse. Debt cancellation is the only way out then. Increasing number of people will not help. What needs doing is directing rents to council's hands rather than to private ones. If not done, collapse will follow ...
@stevencutts63145 күн бұрын
It isn't going to be easy but I am a science person so I would put the priority on new technology which can increase producitivy and replace human workers. New medical breakthroughs can help us work for longer. Just increasing the retirement age by one year leads to a marked reduction in pension payments. the other issue os that means tested state pensions are almost inevitable with middle class people being forced to abandon part or all of their state pension. I would cut the state pension by ten percent for every addition house a Man owns with the result that a man who owned ten houses would get no state pension but if he were to sell them then he'd get some more. Id offer to abolish the standard rate of income tax for a man who continues to work over the age of 65 if he agrees to not claim the state pension for that year,
@t28mcd3 күн бұрын
He's ignoring the demand side of the problem...
@tonycollyweston61824 күн бұрын
In the US health outcomes follow the money, where the bulk of money is spent.you have great outcomes, and where you have very low spending you get people dying earlier. This the demographic that scews the life expectancy down.
@prolarka5 күн бұрын
That net debt interest seems too much for a budget, in my opinion. I am sure it makes the lenders happy.
@Alex-cw3rz5 күн бұрын
Taxes are rising for us, but not for the rich, the highest tax burden on the average household since WW2, yet the top rate of tax is the second lowest it has been since WW2 and corporation tax up until a year ago was at a 50 year low. As Marginal Propensity to consume coupled with velocity of money means that growth is being constrained, reversing to the old model of the 60s to the 40s where the burden was on the wealthy is the way to go.
@Alex-cw3rz5 күн бұрын
Also before someone comments but the rich pay more if you go by certain metrics, of course they do they earn more and take more from the government from roads to the Internet, i.e. Bazos would have made not one penny if it was not for government infrastructure. The point is as you can see by the roads they need to be paying more to improve society. It improves their lives as well look at the UK of the 50s and 60s 97% top rate of tax and the UK was the centre of art, culture and research, streets clean etc.
@JR-lz4bz5 күн бұрын
@@Alex-cw3rz Exactly and it's why the rhetoric about the rich deserving to pay less tax because they've 'earned' it is so frustrating since their success hinges heavily on the state providing a steady stream of working infrastructure and healthy, skilled workers.
@rogerbartlet57205 күн бұрын
What amusing about this argument is the evasion of the fact that "the rich" run (actually own) the country and any perception fairness was always peddled by their politicians for public consumption. Tax the rich, tax the hell out of them, it'll only bite the common people.
@JSmith198585 күн бұрын
Portsmouth isn’t under Hampshire Council. PCC is separate and the northern areas like Waterlooville are Winchester Council
@stateofflux74535 күн бұрын
Waterlooville is within the "Havant Borough" local authority (not the Winchester local authority) and is also under Hampshire County Council.
@JSmith198585 күн бұрын
Partly right. My sister lives in Waterlooville and it is under Winchester. I thought Winchester was a unitary authority, but it is part of Hampshire Council
@DIFESA_RAZZA_BIANCA5 күн бұрын
“I repeat my prophecy England will not only not be able to stop Marxism but its own development will inevitably follow the course of this degenerative disease" Austrian painter 1945
@auldfouter86615 күн бұрын
I object how he casually derides the CAP - as if feeding 500 million people was a cinch. When the CAP was in its pomp there weren't years when food prices rose 20 odd percent and we had reseerves against upheavals such as the Ukraine war. The CAP was supposed to slow the depopulation of Europes rural areas which it didn't but it did try to allow the displaced population to find work in urban areas.
@paulinskipukprogressive49035 күн бұрын
Very interesting segment nonetheless
@randomrandomness87435 күн бұрын
I wonder where all that money went from the deeply discounted sale of council houses? It certainly wasn't back in to replacement properties.
@rogermanvell46935 күн бұрын
the sale of council houses was a public finance disater we have spent far more on housing benefit since.
@inbb5105 күн бұрын
Went into pensions and welfare benefits due to an ageing population. It's just simple maths. The more old people you have that survive into their post-70s, you need more money for State Pensions and more money for healthcare.
@rogermanvell46935 күн бұрын
@@inbb510 it went into the hands of private landlords via housing benefit.
@Fab666.3 күн бұрын
They sold 2 million can u believe 🤦♂️
@megapangolin10935 күн бұрын
The UK needs an ID/Health card system. Nothing should happen without it. Then we have more control over spending. We need to stop signing everyone off with mental illness too, it is becoming a national sport. We need a little control, and we seem to be giving it all up. Very interesting examination of the number one question that people are asking these days.
@wind.del.change5 күн бұрын
nope
@JLCC20225 күн бұрын
Human has a tendency to inactivity and, to be it straight, laziness. We can't assume that everyone is being honest and getting what they need, instead of what they want. People can easily fake mental health issues, not doing anything and are entitled to all sorts of benefits. The current welfare schemes will kill this nation in this century. Things need to be fixed and Brits need to work harder, not less.
@piotr58304 күн бұрын
You allowed millions of dangerous, useless people to come to you and game your system. How can you not see the burden this has created? You failed.
@paulinskipukprogressive49035 күн бұрын
Very interesting - wonder why you left out Brexit as a cause of reduced growth ?
@inbb5105 күн бұрын
Because it's not really relevant. The underlying cause is low fertility rates and ageing populations which is happening regardless of whether you are in the EU or not. We are living off a welfare state that is effectively a glorified Ponzi scheme that is unsustainable in the long-term.
@ZenioDovgj4 күн бұрын
This is the fate of welfare states. If there are no money then the logical thing is to cut expenses.
@CD-pm9kc3 күн бұрын
British public want more tax looking at polls, they want maximum socialism. It’s a feature not a bug.
@ProfoundFamiliarity5 күн бұрын
Are we living too long?
@phoneticau4 күн бұрын
Norway has it right its GDP tripled over 70 years but its population not increased greater than 38% and a big chunk of that was migration 3.5 vs 5.2M (1954 2024)
@iceonthemoon5 күн бұрын
The government should be brave and make these difficult decisions now, scrapping the triple lock and cutting welfare spending. The problem with the post 2010 austerity is that it was prolonged over a decade, I think people will understand and tolerate austerity if is implemented over a short period of time rather than prolonged period of decline. For example, between 2010-2012 spending should have been cut back to 2007 levels as a share of GDP, then given real terms increases in the following years. Similarly, between 2021-2023 spending should have returned to 2019 levels as a share of GDP and we would now be talking about increasing investment without raising taxes. This would have been a lot easier if the government dealt with recessions with one-off cash injections, rather than core departmental spending increases.
@hobbabobba79125 күн бұрын
It seems social democracy also doesn't work
@wind.del.change5 күн бұрын
you pay my bills, ill pay your bills. never works.....
@davideyres9555 күн бұрын
Continently failed to mention the massive decline in council house building under Labour in Blairs era. 450 in one year. Council house building balances rent price and rent price balance mortgage driven housing costs. Failure to build council housing is the biggest failure of modern governments.
@VincentRE795 күн бұрын
The content maker is a Blairite so this will never get mentioned.
@rogermanvell46935 күн бұрын
Another excellent video, you are doing great work helping people understand the real problems the UK faces.
@ralffig32975 күн бұрын
Labour will make this look like a childs play.
@parvuselephantus3 күн бұрын
12:20 - is the short life expectancy a problem for US? The shorter you live, the smaller cost your are :D
@ronfesta7713 күн бұрын
Me thinketh how did so many of., Al's relatives get into......positions of power. An offer you can refuse!@!?🤑😉🤪🤪🤪
@christopherwalton1373Күн бұрын
Don’t worry Labour are going to make it all worse. But you already know this don’t you
@noodlebrains5 күн бұрын
It’s an interesting problem. I think the issue is the politics and everyone making different decisions. Rishi spent £500m on Rwanda scheme and Kier cancelled it. So £500m wasted? Why do we fund care services, can pensions cover this? The NHS is a nice idea, badly managed and very wasteful with spend. £10 billion on unusable PPE. I wonder if UK would be better off with just one decision maker and removal of the government. So if someone says deport everyone who came here via boats, we don’t have a million policies, rules, lawyers blocking this.
@theolddog51295 күн бұрын
"I wonder if UK would be better off with just one decision maker and removal of the government" Your other name would not be Ms Truss by any chance? 😀😀😀
@MichaelMurray-z8z4 күн бұрын
THE LOCAL AUTHORITY OF PORTSMOUTH IS PORTSMOUTH CITY COUNCIL, NOT HAMPSHIRE. WAKE UP SHEEPLE 🐑 🐑 🐑
@larskaminskidk5 күн бұрын
The problem is that citizens have become far too dependent on the welfare state and therefore forget to take responsibility for their own lives. In the future, we will therefore have to take more responsibility for our own lives and the lives of our immediate family.