Elephant Pyjamas
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Are Truss and Kwarteng no longer to blame?
Are Truss and Kwarteng no longer to blame?
Are Truss and Kwarteng no longer to blame?
What is more incredulous is that she still claims that those at the Treasury didn't advise her that this would happen. Its not surprising really is it Truss when you sacked the top civil servant at the Treasury, just because you could, and that would have created a culture of fear for anyone speaking out against her plans (which she wouldn't have listened to anyway). It was still her job to surround herself with competent people and a chancellor who would have seen all this coming. She ignored the OBR and is on record as not being a fan of the Governor of the Bank of England so wouldn't have sought his advice either.I think the thing with Truss and Kwarteng was they put hundreds of pounds a month on millions of people's bills overnight...for ABSOLUTELY NO FUCKING REASON AND WITH NO POSSIBLE GAIN AT ALL. Plus anyone halfway versed in the markets could have told them this would happen.
The worldwide cost of borrowing would have risen anyway due to a variety of factors but that's nothing like in the same sphere.
A footballing analogy would be Southampton last season. They might have gone down anyway, they weren't very good and had been declining steadily for a while, a club that size is always vulnerable to a bad season costing them, the owners strategy in the market didn't seem the best and if they had survived then they'd likely have been in trouble again this year. However that doesn't mean you can appoint a religious lunatic with bizarre tactics and a CV that is miles off that of a PL manager, have to sack him inside weeks before he got sectioned, and then say 'well, anyone would probably have had a job keeping us up'.
Didn't Sunak also tell her it was a bad idea?What is more incredulous is that she still claims that those at the Treasury didn't advise her that this would happen. Its not surprising really is it Truss when you sacked the top civil servant at the Treasury, just because you could, and that would have created a culture of fear for anyone speaking out against her plans (which she wouldn't have listened to anyway). It was still her job to surround herself with competent people and a chancellor who would have seen all this coming. She ignored the OBR and is on record as not being a fan of the Governor of the Bank of England so wouldn't have sought his advice either.
The brass neck of her still makes my blood boil.
Yes but those who voted for her loved her Maggie impressions, her being willing to pretend that the leader of France was a foe, that it would be jam for everyone and that she wasn't the child of an immigrant.Didn't Sunak also tell her it was a bad idea?
How much did the house cost compared to your salary?Got a mortgage for the house I still live at in 1987, in 1989 I was paying about 15% interest.
The interest was eye watering then (we bought in 1985) but you're right wages as a percentage of house prices was much, much higher.How much did the house cost compared to your salary?
Ours was £29k in 1989 at 11.75% ,and we fixed that rate for three years !House cost £25,500, difficult to remember salary, about £7,000/£7,500 maybe.
It's hard to predict the future, fixing at something you know you can afford isn't the worst idea in the world.Ours was £29k in 1989 at 11.75% ,and we fixed that rate for three years !
I'm always available for sound financial advice, if anyone needs it
That was our thinking, as I was a lorry driver at the time and earning less than £200 a week, it made sense, the fact the interest rate plummeted within twelve months of us taking it out was purely the story of my lifeIt's hard to predict the future, fixing at something you know you can afford isn't the worst idea in the world.
I don't mind council houses being sold off, when we bought our house it was 20,000, the council house we were living in was available for about 7000, it was a good house too, unfortunately my missus didn't want to stay there after a couple of break ins.If only there were council houses for the young to live in while on short wages. Not sure what happened to them