Britain is now a poor country pretending to be rich

Scientific Playa

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How did this happen to Jolly Old England? Brexit?
Even King Charles III is economizing and eliminating royal staff.
The article slightly addresses the price gouging and crazy profits in the real estate market for the last half of a decade. All of a sudden it's higher wages and interest rates are the problem.

Britain is now a poor country pretending to be rich


We remain addicted to huge loans and state support, while our leaders pretend that money grows on trees. It’s led to an economic calamity

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CAMILLA TOMINEY [ASSOCIATE EDITOR
23 June 2023 • 5:20pm

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CREDIT: Zoltan Gabor


It’s hard to decide which is most offensive: former Bank of England governor Mark Carney blaming Britain’s world-leading rate of inflation on Brexit or his successor Andrew Bailey suggesting that it has been caused by “unsustainable” wage increases. In a typically egotistical bout of told-you-so-ing, Carney opined this week: “We [the Bank] laid out in advance of Brexit that this will be a negative supply shock for a period of time and the consequence of that will be a weaker pound, higher inflation and weaker growth. And the central bank will need to lean against that.

“Now that’s exactly what’s happened. It’s happened in coincidence with other factors, but it is a unique aspect of the economic adjustment that’s going on here.”

While Brexit may have played a small part in our stubbornly high inflation, does Carney seriously think we are going to overlook the fact that he was a governor who presided over the ultra low interest rates that helped to precipitate this crisis, along with the Bank’s reckless quantitative easing (QE) programme? And what is Bailey’s excuse for not only failing to heed multiple warnings that inflation was going to surge rapidly post-pandemic, but also for taking the catastrophic decision to continue QE beyond even Carney’s Monopoly-style levels of money printing?

You do not have to be an economist to work out that the Bank’s completely cavalier approach to monetary policy, combined with keeping interest rates too low for too long, has contributed to this mess on arguably a far greater scale than the war in Ukraine or other international factors. That’s why Britain’s inflation rate is stuck at 8.7 per cent and why core inflation continues to rise here but not in other parts of the world. What we learned this week is that we’re increasingly isolated. Other countries are taming inflation, but not us. The Bank clearly thinks we’re stuffed, and for good reason: we’re fast becoming the West’s inflation monster.

Theresa May joked about Jeremy Corbyn’s “magic money tree” – seemingly oblivious to the fact there was a whole forest of them planted on Threadneedle Street. Want a £500,000 mortgage on a £1 million house at low interest? Here you go, said commercial banks, taking their lead from the central bank. Fancy a low interest business loan? Knock yourself out! And when interest rates go in the only direction they possibly can when they’ve been stuck near zero for more than a decade? Ah, we’ll cross that bridge when it comes to it.

Little wonder, then, that successive governments have sought to so liberally splash taxpayers’ cash. Since the 2008 global financial crash, a mindset appears to have set in that the solution to all our economic woes is “free” money – when actually that has been the root cause of many of our economic ills.

The great myth that the Government can pay for whatever it wants has finally been destroyed, and as is ever the case when arrogant “institutions” that claim to know best cock things up, it is the people who pay their wages who truly suffer.

What makes matters even worse, however, is that we’ve now been conditioned into thinking these same institutions will bail us out. In this, we are arguably as much to blame as the Bank. Just as Carney and co have profligately printed money and willingly financed our cheap debt, so too have we developed a dangerous dependency on the state stepping in when the economy hits the buffers.

After having our pockets stuffed with furlough cash during lockdown, we deluded ourselves that we are living in a rich country that can afford to cover our losses. We doubled down on this fantasy when our energy bills were subsidised. What’s another £70 billion on an energy support package when you’ve already spent the same amount paying a million people’s wages for months on end?

Few thought to question at the time whether paying people to sit at home and do nothing was actually a colossal waste of money guaranteed to have catastrophic economic consequences. Billions were thrown around like confetti, with those making the decisions seemingly losing sight of the fact that, for the same amount of money, we could have reduced crime or enjoyed massive tax cuts.

And to think some people still complained that the furlough money wasn’t enough, or that it wasn’t sufficient for the Treasury to increase child benefits and pensions in line with inflation, at 10 per cent.

Wages rose, even though more people were working from home, but it was all an illusion. All the time we were sitting on a debt mountain that is now on the verge of an avalanche. Again, shouldn’t we all have known better? If we were really honest with ourselves, we would admit that some of us have been reckless with our mortgages in the misguided belief that interest rates would stay low and that house prices would keep on going up, forever. True, the Bank did little to disabuse us of that fallacy by lulling us into a false sense of security, but deep down, we all knew it was a ticking time bomb, waiting to explode.

This week we also learned that government debt has risen above 100 per cent of GDP for the first time since 1961. How on earth can that really be a surprise to anyone when, at every turn, the expectation has been for the Government to stump up money it doesn’t even have?

We have also shown a casual disregard for the concept of living within our means, taking out huge loans to finance shiny new cars every three years and putting all our online spending on buy-now-pay-later schemes. This, too, has fooled us into thinking we are richer than we are.

The harsh truth is that we are a poor country now, not just with rising core inflation and interest rates, but also the soon-to-be highest tax burden since the Second World War.

Such is our addiction to having everything we want, when we want it, that some now expect to be helped with their spiralling mortgage costs. The fiscally incontinent Liberal Democrats are talking about mortgage bailouts, as if it is the role of the state to underwrite or directly compensate anyone who is disadvantaged by events. Meanwhile we’ve got the Left criticising “cuts” and calling for public sector pay rises, seemingly oblivious to the fact that even this supposedly Right-wing Government has managed to blow the budget.

Any rescue package would result in renters having to subsidise the very people whose booming house prices have prevented them from getting on the ladder in the first place. It would leave us in a perverse situation of the have-nots propping up the haves.



 

Scientific Playa

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I was in London staying with friends like 4 years ago. One of the dudes who is from there was telling me that it's a wrap for the UK. Had to hit him with a real life :therethere: but he came back with "Nah, mate. UK is trash." :sadcam:

I had to let him have it after that.

I thought the same when I saw this story back in 2009.

Welcome to binge Britain: Polish photographer documents four years of drunken revelry in Cardiff​

By LUKE SALKELD FOR THE DAILY MAIL
UPDATED: 05:00 EDT, 16 May 2009

 

Kyle C. Barker

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I thought the same when I saw this story back in 2009.

Welcome to binge Britain: Polish photographer documents four years of drunken revelry in Cardiff​

By LUKE SALKELD FOR THE DAILY MAIL
UPDATED: 05:00 EDT, 16 May 2009



Blimey

I had no idea the UK had as many fat b*stards as the US. They about to take our spot
 

Scientific Playa

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Very interesting British history.

Associated Press

UK village marks 80th anniversary of fight against US Army racism in World War II​

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Britain Battle of Bamber Bridge Anniversary​

Clinton Smith, chair of Preston Black History Group is seen by the Ye Olde Hob Inn in Bamber Bridge near Preston, England, Thursday, June 22, 2023. What is now known as the Battle of Bamber Bridge erupted there on June 24, 1943 when white military police officers confronted black soldiers enjoying a night off in the local pub. (AP Photo/Jon Super)
ASSOCIATED PRESS


DANICA KIRKA
Sat, June 24, 2023 at 3:58 AM

BAMBER BRIDGE, England (AP) — The village of Bamber Bridge in northwestern England is proud of the blow it struck against racism in the U.S. military during World War II.

When an all-Black truck regiment was stationed there, residents refused to accept the segregation ingrained in the U.S. Army. Ignoring pressure from British and American authorities, pubs welcomed the GIs, local women chatted and danced with them, and English soldiers drank alongside men they saw as allies in the war.

But simmering tensions between Black soldiers and white military police exploded on June 24, 1943, when a dispute outside a pub escalated into a night of gunfire. Private William Crossland was killed and dozens of soldiers from the truck regiment faced court martial. When Crossland’s niece learned about the circumstances of her uncle’s death, she called for a new investigation to uncover how he died.

The community has chosen to focus on its stand against segregation as it commemorates the 80th anniversary of what’s now known as the Battle of Bamber Bridge and America reassesses its past treatment of Black men and women in the armed forces.

“It’s a sense of pride that there was no bigotry towards (the soldiers),” said Valerie Fell, who was just 2 in 1943 but whose family ran Ye Olde Hob Inn, the 400-year-old thatched-roof pub where the conflict started. “They deserved the respect of the uniform that they were wearing.''

EXPORTING SEGREGATION

Black soldiers accounted for about 10% of the American troops in Britain during the war. Serving in segregated units led by white officers, most were relegated to non-combat roles such as driving trucks. U.S. authorities tried to extend those policies beyond their bases, asking pubs and restaurants to separate the races.

Bamber Bridge, then home to about 6,800 people, wasn’t the only place to resist. In a country then almost entirely white, there was no tradition of segregation.

What’s different about it was the desire of local people to preserve their story, said Alan Rice, co-director of the Institute for Black Atlantic Research at the University of Central Lancashire.

“If you’re fighting fascism, which these people were, it’s ludicrous, absolutely ludicrous, that the U.S. Army (were) encouraging a form of fascism — segregation,” Rice said.

Clinton Smith, head of the Black history group in nearby Preston, wants people to look more closely at what happened. The history “just can’t be allowed to wither on the vine.”

THE BATTLE OF BAMBER BRIDGE

Despite their friendships with the GIs, villagers weren’t able to head off the violence when Black soldiers, frustrated by their treatment and angry about race riots in Detroit, faced off with military police outfitted with batons and sidearms.

On that hot June night, Private Eugene Nunn was sitting at the Hob Inn bar when a white military police officer threatened to arrest him for wearing the wrong uniform. British soldiers and civilians intervened.

“Everyone was saying, ‘Leave him alone. He just wants a drink. It’s a hot day,’’’ Fell said as she recounted her mother’s story. “People just didn’t understand this viciousness.’’

When Nunn left the pub, the police were waiting. Tempers rose. A bottle smashed against the windshield of the police Jeep. Things escalated and it wasn’t until 4 a.m. that order was restored.

Military authorities sought severe penalties — 37 Black soldiers were charged with mutiny, riot and unlawful possession of weapons. Some 30 received sentences of between three and 15 years in prison, combined with loss of pay and dishonorable discharges. As the allies prepared for D-Day, many had their sentences shortened so they could be cycled back into the war effort.

While the court martial criticized the white officers for poor leadership, no records indicate they or the military police were disciplined.

LONGSTANDING CHANGE

Ken Werrell, a U.S. Air Force Academy graduate and retired professor of history at Radford University in Virginia, studied the proceedings and reviewed military records for an article published in 1975. He told The Associated Press the Black soldiers were badly treated.

But the broader story is that senior generals, focused on improving morale and performance, quickly ordered changes in the treatment of Black troops. Many of the officers commanding Black units were replaced and the army deployed more racially mixed police patrols.

“The Bamber Bridge affair was more than just a minor incident in World War II,” Werrell wrote. “It was one of a number of incidents in the Black’s and America’s continuing crusade for freedom.”

President Harry Truman in 1948 ordered the end of segregation in the military, though that took years to fully achieve. Lloyd Austin, a Black man and retired four-star general in the Army, is now secretary of defense.

That progress was too late for Crossland, a former railroad worker who was 25 when he died. Court martial evidence said only that he was found gravely wounded, with a bullet near his heart. Officers said they believed he had been caught in cross-fire between two groups of Black soldiers.

RE-ASSESSING HISTORY

Nancy Croslan Adkins, the daughter of one of William’s brothers, said she was never told about the circumstances of her uncle’s death. The family later changed the spelling of its last name.

Adkins, of Upper Marlboro, Maryland, wants to know more about what happened.

“Having dealt with direct discrimination myself by integrating the school system in North Carolina, and the racial injustice that my parents faced, I would love an investigation,” she said.

Aaron Snipe, the spokesman for the U.S. Embassy in London, said he couldn’t prejudge any military decision, but President Joe Biden’s administration has shown a willingness to “right the wrongs of the past.”

Earlier this month, the U.S. Navy issued a formal apology to the families of 15 Black sailors who were dishonorably discharged in 1940 after complaining that they were forced to wait tables.

Snipe, meanwhile, will pay tribute to the people of Bamber Bridge at an event marking the anniversary.

“Part of this story is about their unwillingness to accept segregation orders or regulations that were pushed on them,” he said. “They pushed back."

___

Associated Press writer Ben Finley in Norfolk, Virginia, and researcher Rhonda Shafner in New York contributed to this report.

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An Air Training Corps building is seen in Bamber Bridge near Preston, England, Wednesday, June 7, 2023. The building is the last remaining part of a base where black troops were stationed in the town during WWII and where what is now known as the Battle of Bamber Bridge erupted when on June 24, 1943 white military police officers confronted black soldiers enjoying a night off in a local pub
 

mastermind

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Ironically, the author of the OP is a pro-Brexit conservative. So a lot of this is just typical "we need to cut spending!" pearl clutching disguised as something else.
Yeah

The article is crying about giving people money and services during the height of Covid. It was so over the top conservative that I had to read and see she is a loony Tory herself.
 

BigMoneyGrip

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Ironically, the author of the OP is a pro-Brexit conservative. So a lot of this is just typical "we need to cut spending!" pearl clutching disguised as something else.
I know that and it’s why i posted leave the EU… it’s partly why they poor now… Being in the EU help stabilize their economy… The pound and Euro during that point was higher than the dollar.. Britain’s let their conservative blokes finesse em bully getting finessed by Russian props into leaving the EU
 
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