Forum menu
Cuts - Union knee j...
 

[Closed] Cuts - Union knee jerk response or last line of defence against the Torries?

Posts: 12
Free Member
 

The idea we "don't make anything any more" is nonsense. We make lots, and are a world leader in so many areas (I mean, even the world's most tedious "sport", Formula 1, employs 30,000 people in the UK).

What we don't make any more are heavy industry items that require a large workforce, hence no mines and a small number of shipyards. Effectively, the nation has had to upskill to compete in the post-industrial era.

All this is fine, but put it against a backdrop of:

1. Global financial crisis (for which all Britain's governments since the Big Bang are partly responsible); and
2. A fundamental ideological difference between the (remnants of) the Labour Party and the (apparently newly electable) Conservative Party*.

We have been convinced that cuts must be made. Why? Simple: the only control any government has over the economy is (1) the amount of tax it takes and (2) the amount is spends on public services. It can do nothing else to influence it, other than pretending when fiddling about with inflation targets, etc. So, if the gov't can't raise tax as it is deemed electoral suicide post-Thatcher (though, ironically, her cutting of the higer rates of income tax to 40% actually increased the net take), they have one option: cut public services.

The rhetoric from all parties has been "cuts are necessary", and we've all bought that so far. A recent Mori-Ipsos poll has shown that 59% of people are in favour of cuts. The trouble is, 59% are also against the VAT rise. What this seems to suggest is that people approve of cuts in the abstract, but will not when it directly affects them.

There is a significant dowanwards shift in the general standard of living on its way. Very few people have grasped this, and so the sense of pain we will feel when cuts do affect us directly will be even greater. If the unions manage to prey on that feeling at the time, there will be trouble.

*I'm not going into that now - the whole sense of ideology is fascinating, but the subject of another essay another day.


 
Posted : 13/09/2010 2:50 pm
Posts: 341
Free Member
 

TandemJeremy - Member
zulu - you are an offensive clown with no grasp of reality.

Cameron and Clegg have repeatedly said they are intending cuts of 25-40% in most government Depts. So they are lying are they?

[b]Project - you cannot have cuts on the scale intended without service reductions. its simply not possible. The numbers don't add up.[/b]

Posted 21 minutes ago # Report-Post

But we can and must cut the wastage, the blatant laziness, the empire building thyat has been allowed to go on for to many tears.

So what do myou expect, a single fireman to be sent out with a motorbike to a fire, already happening in Liverpool.

PCSO,s instead of real police officers,

Foreign imported staff to care for the elderley,some who cant sp
speak english,

Heads and directors of departments, with assistants and deputies,that have no contact with the public,

Mayors and their parlours, somebody having a laugh,along with chauffer driven cars,

Public buildings floodlite all night,

and theres more.


 
Posted : 13/09/2010 2:59 pm
Posts: 129
Free Member
 

So what do myou expect, a single fireman to be sent out with a motorbike to a fire, already happening in Liverpool.
....or, for instance a single Paramedic being sent out in a car to road accidents etc. etc.

It's easy to take examples like that out of context when the reality is that both the above can get to situations very quickly and assess the need for additional services. Is it always really necessary for a whole fire or ambulance crew to attend a minor road bump when they could be more usefully deployed elsewhere?

Unforunately these are only 'low level' savings. The real savings are to be made in the obvious areas such as top heavy management, 'benefit scams', tax dodging, government waste, etc.

All this can be achieved without any reduction in services to the people who [b]really[/b] need them. Unfortunately to implement them, and this is true for any government 'plan', a new raft of departments will be brought in to oversee the schemes, completely negating any saving or improvement in efficiency which could have been made.


 
Posted : 13/09/2010 3:18 pm
Posts: 57367
Full Member
 

Surely if we just killed all the elderly and infirm, then possibly the unemployed, we'd be out of this pickle in no time


 
Posted : 13/09/2010 3:20 pm
 tron
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Surely if we just killed all the elderly and infirm, then possibly the unemployed, we'd be out of this pickle in no time

I believe that's DC's next strategy, he's currently working with Lady T on a method for raising the dead. Genuine Social Darwinism will ensure that only the fit and well connected can survive the zombie hordes.


 
Posted : 13/09/2010 3:24 pm
Posts: 91163
Free Member
 

Are you catching on? There'll be no "cuts". There never are!

So you are saying that departments have been asked to find 25% savings, but they won't actually get implemented?

Good news if that were the case. And an interesting tactic.

Simple: the only control any government has over the economy is

Not really true. You can set things up over the longer term to encourage certain kinds of outside investment, and not just through tax breaks.

What this seems to suggest is that people approve of cuts in the abstract, but will not when it directly affects them

Not entirely unreasonable - the VAT rise will really hit very poor people, but the rich won't give a toss. You'd be forgiven for thinking that was unfair, surely?


 
Posted : 13/09/2010 3:31 pm
 DT78
Posts: 10066
Free Member
 

For my two pennies I am welcoming cuts to civil service back office, far too many people on an easy ride. I know many people just 'hanging' around for their severance pay, which due to length of service and over the top beneficial terms (union negotiated) are likely to get 6 figure payouts (for middle/senior mgrs). It's bred a negative culture of people actually desperately trying to get voluntary every time it pops up as some form of lottery win.....sadly it;s cheaper to keep these skivers on moaning and drinking coffee than it is to actually get rid. So the Civil servants that'll go will be the younger, shorter service (not on the super ridiculous terms), the ones who actually do the work....

Apparently we've also got over a 100 contractors on site at an average of £800 a day due to the fact salaries are so low so they cannot recruit perm senior roles, but somehow a grand a day is ok for a contractor many who've been there for longer than I have (3 years)??? Different line on a spreadsheet I suppose.

There are so many places where money could be saved before they hit policing/fire etc....

/exit rant mode/


 
Posted : 13/09/2010 3:32 pm
 tron
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

So you are saying that departments have been asked to find 25% savings, but they won't actually get implemented?

I think his point is that the cuts are in real terms - ie, adjusted for inflation. Simply not increasing budgets in line with expected inflation each year is in effect a cut.

As for the VAT increase, it's well known that it will hit C2D&E hardest. I'd be interested to see how an average individual ends up overall considering the changes to income tax thresholds, which should help C2D&E the most...


 
Posted : 13/09/2010 3:33 pm
Posts: 91163
Free Member
 

Apparently we've also got over a 100 contractors on site

It's WAY WAY cheaper than getting a consultancy company in though, and way the hell more productive. They are contractors because they just can't employ 100 permies and potentially have them hang around for 20 years or have to do massive redundancies in 5 years.

Where do you work? I only ask because I used to be in a very similar position and am now contracting for an SI on a govt project, so I'm interested in how this works. PM me if you want.


 
Posted : 13/09/2010 3:51 pm
Posts: 8751
Full Member
 

The problem with the public sector cuts is the useless gits that allow blatant waste of money in the first place (that the cuts are intended to target) are the same people that will decide what to cut so chances are the front-line stuff will get hit just as much as any back-room waste.


 
Posted : 13/09/2010 3:53 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Are you catching on? There'll be no "cuts". There never are!
So you are saying that departments have been asked to find 25% savings, but they won't actually get implemented?

Sorry, I should have reworded my initial point as "There'll be no [i]significant[/i] "cuts". There never are!" Just minor messing around the edges.


 
Posted : 13/09/2010 3:54 pm
Posts: 91163
Free Member
 

Another problem with 'cutting the useless gits' is that it's practically impossible. Public sector will never work the same way as private, and the aimless retirement watchers are an unavoidable side-effect I fear.


 
Posted : 13/09/2010 4:01 pm
 DT78
Posts: 10066
Free Member
 

and way the hell more productive.

Some contractors are most definitely worth what they are paid, but not all, some are rubbish even to the point of taking the piss. And again the place is so 'pc' you can't get shot of them till renewal time.

The whole culture is awful, my only hope is the cuts make a difference, but I think as other people on this thread have said I severely doubt it. Tbh once the market picks up I'll be back to banking 🙂

I'll pm you later on molgrips.


 
Posted : 13/09/2010 4:09 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Efficiency and progress is ours once more,
now that we have the Neutron bomb
It's nice and quick and clean and gets things done.
Away with excess enemy.
But no less value to property.
No sense in war but perfect sense at home--

The sun beams down on a brand new day
No more welfare tax t' pay
Unsightly slums gone up in flashing light.
Jobless millions whisked away.
At last we have more room to play.
All systems go to kill the poor tonight.

Gonna
Kill kill kill kill kill the poor. kill kill kill Kill kill the poor kill kill kill Kill kill the poor…Tonight

[*chorus]
Tonight... tonight!
Behold the sparkle of champagne
The crime rate's gone
Feel free again
O' life's a dream with you, Miss Lily White.
Jane Fonda on the screen today
Convinced the liberals it's okay
So let's get dressed and dance away the night

While they…
Kill kill kill kill the poor 3x
Tonight... tonight!


 
Posted : 13/09/2010 4:17 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Zulu - have you lost your tenuous grip on reality completely?

Clegg and Cameron both repeatedly state the level of the cuts - 25 - 40 % in most depts - NHS / Education / Overseas development will simply have static budgets - the rest will have these massive cuts. That is what the politicians organising it state will happen.

Its not tinkering around the edges - its massive programme of cuts without precedent in the UK.

That is what Cameron and Clegg state


 
Posted : 13/09/2010 4:19 pm
 tron
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

TJ, if they've repeatedly said that in public, there will be newspaper articles. I'm not calling you a liar, but this is going round in circles.

Could one of you please prove the other wrong?


 
Posted : 13/09/2010 4:22 pm
Posts: 91163
Free Member
 

Some contractors are most definitely worth what they are paid, but not all, some are rubbish even to the point of taking the piss.

Ever worked with a big consultancy? 🙂


 
Posted : 13/09/2010 4:23 pm
Posts: 4892
Free Member
 

Its not tinkering around the edges - its massive programme of cuts without precedent in the UK.

Good, I've worked for the public sector and my god they don't half p1$$ money up the wall. Not just a bit here and a bit there, but evertywhere and all the time. It's quite incredible how much money you see wasted.

If you're good at what you do and provide good value then go do it in the private sector.


 
Posted : 13/09/2010 4:30 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Clegg and Cameron both repeatedly state the level of the cuts - 25 - 40 %

[b]No[/b], they have asked departments to present them with [b]plans[/b] for "cuts" at those levels, options if you will - as I've already said to you, the MOD have plans for war with france, plans for nuclear war, and more than likley contingency plans for massive UFO attack - the mere existence of "plans" does not in any way indicate the likelihood of a particular thing occurring!

The Governments official budgetary plans detail a 10% increase in actual cash spend over the next five years. If inflation is less than 2% per annum, then like it or not that is [b]not[/b] even a [i]real terms[/i] cut in government spending.


 
Posted : 13/09/2010 5:05 pm
Posts: 91163
Free Member
 

Good, I've worked for the public sector and my god they don't half p1$$ money up the wall

So do the private sector mate!


 
Posted : 13/09/2010 5:20 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Tron

All departments, excluding the NHS and international aid, have been asked to find four-year cuts of between 25% and 40%.

Mr Clegg told Radio 4's Today programme there were "difficult decisions" ahead but talk of billions being taken out of the economy immediately was misleading and only added to people's fears.

The cuts would begin in April 2011, he said, and would be "spread evenly" over the next four years - equivalent to an annual 6% budget reduction over four years.


 
Posted : 13/09/2010 5:30 pm
 tron
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

The article doesn't support your claim that Clegg or Cameron have said there will be 25-40% cuts, but that they've asked for cuts of that level to be worked out.

Find a quote - them actually saying it, not what the press office or a civil servant has said.


 
Posted : 13/09/2010 5:51 pm
Posts: 7278
Free Member
 tron
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

"After the spending round, we are still going to be spending £700bn of public money - more than we are now."

Nick Clegg, in TJ's above link.


 
Posted : 13/09/2010 6:10 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Tron - what more do you want - thats a reputable source saying that clegg has said this.

Its all there in the media if you want to see it. If you don't want to see it you wont.


 
Posted : 13/09/2010 6:14 pm
 tron
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

TJ, the article does not state that Clegg said cuts of 25-40% are on their way. It says a 6% annual reduction in budget over 4 years.

However, he did say "Some of the hyperbole I have heard is just preposterous ..." 😆


 
Posted : 13/09/2010 6:17 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Tron - do the maths. 6% a year for 4 years?

If you don't want to see this you won't but it is there and clearly stated

all depts bar NHS, Education and international development will have budget cuts of 25-40% over the years 2011-2015. these budgets will be frozen) This is the stated policy of the coalition.


 
Posted : 13/09/2010 6:24 pm
Posts: 50252
Free Member
 

molgrips - Member
Good, I've worked for the public sector and my god they don't half p1$$ money up the wall
So do the private sector mate!

We're not paying for the private sector unless we choose to, though.....

😉


 
Posted : 13/09/2010 6:28 pm
Posts: 7278
Free Member
 

To promote transparency and understanding of the broad magnitude
of spending changes, Table 2.3 presents indicative figures for the overall level
of current and capital DEL spending in the years to 2015-16. These are based
on the OBR’s Budget forecast for AME, as set out in Annex C, which takes
account of specific AME measures announced so far. Based on these implied
DEL figures, and once the Government’s commitments on protecting health
and overseas aid are taken into account, other departments could see average
real cuts to their budgets of around 25 per cent over the four years. This
compares with the average real cuts of around 20 per cent for unprotected
departments implied by the March Budget. The final split between AME and
DEL will be decided at the Spending Review, and any further AME savings will
reduce the size of cuts to departmental budgets.

Para 1.40 of the Red Book, so 5% cuts over and above Labour's plans to unprotected departments.


 
Posted : 13/09/2010 6:34 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

So - you agree - 25% cuts to most government depts budgets.


 
Posted : 13/09/2010 6:45 pm
Posts: 14161
Full Member
 

The response was as inevitable as Tories cutting services. Whilst you cite the economy there are still choices - Obama has not done this for example. Any historian care to name the last Tory govt NOT to cut services immediately after election? It is pre 1970.

Is that Obama, president of the most capitalist economy ever, which operates around the basis of minimum tax and minimum services and benefit and gets away with it because even the truely destitute poor who really do NEED help appear to be brainwashed to believe that it's their right as Americans to be free and live or die by their own means? A country where many of those that needed free healthcare voted against it! You can't cut public services when you don't have any...


 
Posted : 13/09/2010 6:47 pm
 tron
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I certainly agree that 25% cuts are planned. I don't think Nick Clegg or David Cameron have actually said that out loud in public though. 😀


 
Posted : 13/09/2010 6:54 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

A country where many of those that needed free healthcare voted against it! You can't cut public services when you don't have any...

It's what happens when the wealthy get a total grip on the media and the politicians, many of which are wealthy themselves. The wealthy have been selling their dream to the poor (and they class the middle class as poor) "you too can be like us if you work hard etc", while they were pulling up the ladder behind them and by using words like "freedom".

This is where this country is going, we've been sold the same dream and as evidenced here there are many who have bought it.


 
Posted : 13/09/2010 7:14 pm
 tron
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

pulling up the ladder

You mean like the typical Labour MP, who has kids in private school, or a house in a good catchment area funded for by the taxpayer, but vehemently defends the rights of everyone else's to go to shite comps?


 
Posted : 13/09/2010 7:17 pm
Posts: 6894
Full Member
Topic starter
 

Well that was fun. Really not impressed by the union leaders after listening to the soundbites on the radio this evening. Apart from the airline pilots union rep, breath of fresh air there, had the conference chairman showing his true colours when the stirrings of a real debate nearly got going. His response when he said they'd like to speak against the motion, you'd better be joking or something to that effect.

I'm not sure I like these unelected lobby groups championing civil disobediance, surely their whole purpose is to look after their members, not try and start riots.

We'll at least it'll force the government into another round of curbing the unions power, last time the right to secondary picketing etc. went, be interresting to see wht happens this time, especially as union membership is significantly down on previous levels.


 
Posted : 13/09/2010 7:23 pm
Posts: 5825
Full Member
 

There is no question that some cuts are needed, lets face it a £700bn deficit is not exactly a healthy thing to have.
However we are as someone else said a comparitively low tax country in comparison to many [url=

I know its a wiki[/url]. Sadly the simple fact is that there is a huge amount of waste in the country particularly public sector (ok ok I know there is some in the private sector but we cover that by buying products they supply). I think the potential 25% cuts would be bonkers but I don't think they would dare go that far, the coalition will collapse. But i think 10% is to be expected, and I think that the unions are going to piss a lot of people off, I work in the private sector and we have had -6% pay cut for the last 18 months. So when I hear people whining about pay freezes etc it gets right on my tits (I know this isn't totally the issue at the moment but still.


 
Posted : 13/09/2010 7:27 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

We'll at least it'll force the government into another round of curbing the unions power, last time the right to secondary picketing etc. went, be interresting to see wht happens this time, especially as union membership is significantly down on previous levels.

Yeah hopefully there will be no unions left at all soon and we can get back to the nice productive Victorian standards of workers rights etc - can't wait!


 
Posted : 13/09/2010 7:31 pm
Posts: 50252
Free Member
 

A somewhat paraphrased quote from Obama;

"I’ve never believed that government’s role is to create jobs or prosperity....I believe it’s the drive and the ingenuity of our entrepreneurs, our small businesses; the skill and dedication of our workers - that’s made us the wealthiest nation on Earth. I believe it’s the private sector that must be the main engine for our recovery.


 
Posted : 13/09/2010 7:36 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

You mean like the typical Labour MP, who has kids in private school, or a house in a good catchment area funded for by the taxpayer, but vehemently defends the rights of everyone else's to go to shite comps?

Yep, A typical MP who belonged to a party following tory policies.

I'm not sure I like these unelected lobby groups championing civil disobediance, surely their whole purpose is to look after their members, not try and start riots.

But you are happy with unelected lobby groups who whispering in the ears of MP's and ministers? I find it hilarious that some people here are talking about unions like its the 1970's again. You are targeting the wrong group.

"that’s made us the wealthiest nation on Earth.

That really should be "thats made SOME of us wealthy in one of the most socially divided nations on earth."


 
Posted : 13/09/2010 7:53 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

one of the most socially divided nations on earth

Dont talk such complete and utter shite!

I suggest you go and visit India, see the social divisions between Brahmin and Dalit, and then come back with a sense of perspective!


 
Posted : 13/09/2010 8:23 pm
Posts: 6894
Full Member
Topic starter
 

I find it hilarious that some people here are talking about unions like its the 1970's again.

Listening to some of the rhetoric and tub thumping at the TUC today it would appear the unions think it's the 1970's again.

Yeah hopefully there will be no unions left at all soon and we can get back to the nice productive Victorian standards of workers rights etc - can't wait!

That's a load of drivel, give the politicans a little bit of credit, society has changed massively, trying to compare reeling the excesses of a minority (I mean the unions) with Victorian working conditions is just fatuous.


 
Posted : 13/09/2010 8:25 pm
Posts: 5559
Free Member
 

If your salary in 2006 were £20,000 p.a., and your salary in 2010 were £20,000 p.a., would you say that your salary had been "cut"? Of course not, or, rather, you might say that, but you would be talking more nonsense. IF there had been inflation over that period, your purchasing power would have been cut, but not your salary.
I see only a semantic difference her. If you cut my purchasing power or cut my salary the efecct is the same. I have less to spend. I m sure you will refute this in your usual understated matey style,
lets face it a £700bn deficit is not exactly a healthy thing to have

Govt spending is £700 billion for 2011-12 so no idea where you got that figure from.
That's a load of drivel, give the politicans a little bit of credit, society has changed massively, trying to compare reeling the excesses of a minority (I mean the unions) with Victorian working conditions is just fatuous.

I think you , somewhat hilariously, missed his point. You are correct society[working conditions] has changed mainly due to the union securing rights for the workers that were not freely given by employers or politicians. The TUC represnt 6.5 million only slightly less than the lib dem vote share. I also hate the excesses of a minority ...bankers, multinationals, non doms, tax avoiders etc.


 
Posted : 13/09/2010 8:46 pm
Posts: 6894
Full Member
Topic starter
 

No I think you've missed the point, whilst unions have undoubtedly contributed to improved working conditions so have many other people, including shock horror right wing politicians. The unions have no more right to claim to have changed society for the better than many other groups. The downside is the unions have also had some pretty negative effects on society, anyone remember the miners strike, not all Thatchers fault.

What ever happens it'll be interresting to see what pans out. My prediction is the unions will find they aren't anywhere near as powerful as they like to think. Not sure they actually represent that many of their members very well either. That question will be answered though when the calls for strikes get heeded or ignored.


 
Posted : 13/09/2010 9:02 pm
Posts: 5559
Free Member
 

whilst unions have undoubtedly contributed to improved working conditions so have many other people, including shock horror right wing politicians

I await the long list of right wing politicians who battled for worker improvements. Cant work out why the Labour party formed from the Unions if we had so many benevolent right wingers actively seeking to improve the lot of the common worker. Incredibly ungrateful for all the efforts of the right winger eh. I mean you educate them[not the women obviously] , kill less of them at work and give them Sunday off [to go to Church] and this is how they treat you.
Not sure they actually represent that many of their members very well either

Not sure you are an expert on this- you in a Union? 99.9999% of union work is not strike related. It is to support their members when the members ask for help. Given the members vote for strikes they probably do better than politicians do in representing their voters interests- see iraq war and a multitude of other areas where the leaders of political parties ignore the wishes of the electorate. A union cannot leggaly do this can they?


 
Posted : 13/09/2010 9:26 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Dont talk such complete and utter shite!

I suggest you go and visit India, see the social divisions between Brahmin and Dalit, and then come back with a sense of perspective!

Perhaps you should go to india and look at the living conditions of an emerging economic power and compare it with the worlds only "super power". A country that is supposedly so wealthy that while it excludes large sections of its population from prospering from that wealth, feeds them the dream that is the American dream. But I expect nothing less from a country that has been run by right wingers for so long.

What ever happens it'll be interresting to see what pans out. My prediction is the unions will find they aren't anywhere near as powerful as they like to think.

So why the 70's rhetoric? I can't understand why you find unions, the people in the past that fought for your rights, such a threat these days.

The biggest threat to the UK is the financial sector and that oh so unfortunate nasty business of crashing the entire financial system. Now don't you think it's time to realise that they like the unions in the 70's have become just too powerful?


 
Posted : 13/09/2010 11:29 pm
Page 2 / 4