Bedoom tax and our system!

This looming crisis is related to the financial crisis of 2007, but it will be infinitely more dangerous. Outgoing Bank of England Governor ‘have a good guess’ Mervyn King- Economist- has urged successor Mark Carney not to spell out how long interest rates will remain low when he takes charge. The low interest rates have as I previously argued creates a false economy, but a economy that can be changed.

The very trillianaires, the tax avoiders, Bankers and speculators which some argue apparently are not the cause of the chaos , always refuse to care and put profits first and people have been way down in there priority list. But apart from these abhorrent groups, interest rates have been at the root of practically every major political argument in this country, and it affects every aspect of the way we live our lives.

Interest rates affect most of us either directly or indirectly. In fact, you will certainly see the consequences of this deep rooted problem unfold across the cities, towns and villages of Britain. No one will escape the fallout and pensioners and those vulnerable are likely to be the most affected. Our system needs to be repaired and much more than that we need to find alternative ways of living and a new system.

The same financial problems that have been tracked from bank to bank, from company to company for more than at least six years, have now found their way into the heart of our financial system which is in disarray. The next phase in this crisis could threaten our very way of life. We know that printing mountains of money – quantitative easing- can only end in disaster. And, unlike most of the presenters on TV and in the mainstream press, some analysts understand what’s really going on, but it is their interests to deceive us.

Of course, the most important part of this situation is not what is happening, but rather what we can do about it. In other words, will you be prepared when this crisis becomes a national emergency, as can easily be predicted. I fear that most people will not know what to do if banks fold and they are unable to withdraw their savings. They won’t know what to do if the stock exchange suspends trading. They will feel powerless, if their pension income dries up or if their home loses 70% of its value. We need to prepare and commence discussions in all our communities. We really do need alternatives to the current mainstream parties, who have made it difficult for others to challenge. Most seem corrupt, but we seem to accept it.

If the NHS is sold off and benefits are partially scrapped, the confusion will turn into rage and huge campaigns. By the next general election in 2015, our national debt is estimated to stand at almost £1.4 trillion. It’s clear: our public finances are in an enormous mess. And to some extent, some politicians will admit it. But add in our financial, personal and private debt and an even darker picture emerges. But more cuts will not solve all this.

Compared to the size of our economy, Britain is now one of the most heavily indebted countries in the Western world. That’s official. Our total debts stand at more than six times of what our entire economy is worth. Proportionally, that’s more debt than Italy, Portugal, Spain and almost twice as much debt as Greece. Those are four countries already in the throes of financial crisis. We’re the odd one out because we haven’t collapsed as yet. But things can’t stay that way for long.

The only countries that have more debt than us are Japan, where the economy has stagnated for 20 years and the stock market has crashed by 75% and Ireland, where the housing market has crashed 50%, and the government has been forced to accept a bailout. It could be said that India bucks these trends, unless you examine the underlying criteria.

That means the most important trend of the next twenty years is almost certainly rising interest rates and the way it affects us all and even those living in a world of denial.

We’re now facing an unprecedented crisis. As interest rates rise, our record debts will become impossible to bear. And what will happen to all those that purchased on a buy to let basis. When these events unfold, very few people will have any idea how to respond. Most will see any assets they have worked all their life begin to lose value, rapidly.

It won’t matter if you have £2,000 in the bank or £500,000. It won’t matter if you own a five bedroom house in Surrey or a one bedroom flat in Chelsea or costed into the bedroom dreadful tax fiasco. This crisis will lay waste to the wealth of anyone who isn’t prepared for it. And prepare we must- profits should not come first!

It’s essential we all prepare for these events. We can’t rely on mainstream commentators to help us. We need to start real debates around the country, to prepare for a new and non speculative system. We can really achieve this, so lets start the debate now.

Health Care and the Economy!

It was about eight years ago that I felt assured enough and to the best of my knowledge that the economy was going to ‘go  bust’. Very cheap and easily obtained mortgages was just one of the clues, backed up by historical facts and a little economics. Most economists got it completely wrong, often because they were in complete denial or wanted to protect their own interests in a speculative and so called free world. This continues today.

Now things have edged forward, I wish I had been wrong. Please do not believe the new ‘green shoots debate’. We simply have to start talking about a different society.

In the meantime, lets try to protect our NHS  from any further fragmentation and  privatisation.

The Clinical Commissioning Groups will play a major role in commissioning health services and will have a nationwide budget of billions of pounds at their disposal. They are tasked with developing Commissioning Plans and replacing the role of Primary Care Trusts.The CCG’s will have responsibility for commissioning or buying health and care services including non-specialist acute services, community services, and continuing healthcare, Mental Health and other important services.

The big move to privatisation is the requirement upon CCG’s to contract with any qualified provider’.

Influence over the CCG’s is therefore of paramount importance.

Meetings need to be convened to involve local people in campaigning to pressure their CCG’s to make changes to their constitutions.

Ivor Timson

Diary date: Saturday 10th November 2012- Birmingham- 1-15 pm 0nwards. Carr’s Lane- Church Centre, Birmingham UK. Who owns our NHS? Speakers and refreshments.

Twaddle from the USA!

The Government is failing in its pledge to rebalance the economy, which is now more dependent than ever on financial services and still remains hell bent on destroying our National Health Service. Of course, it has  little chance of rebalancing the economy, particularly as it is in denial about so many economic facts. But it can reverse some of it’s lunatic policies of further fragmentation of our healthcare system and privatisation. The worldwide system of capitalism is in a deep and irreparable state of crisis. And do not believe the twaddle from the USA economists. It is a tissue of lies.

If you live in or around Birmingham UK- join us at the following meeting.
March and Rally- Who Owns the NHS? 10th November 2012- 1-15pm
The list of speakers for this important meeting and rally is now confirmed as;

Peter Last WMPC- Chair
Joe Morgan- GMB Regional Secretary
Dr Jacky Davis- NHS Consultants Association
John Partridge- Unite Regional Assistant Secretary
Mary Locke- Unison NEC and Health Worker
 
Gail Adams- Head of Nursing- Unison- Chair of Mary Seacole Committee- Unison.
Meeting at Carr’s Lane Church Centre, Birmingham City Centre, Near Birmingham New Street Station- Saturday 10th November 2012- 1-15pm- 5-0pm.

Plenty of opportunity for all those attending to speak and contribute to this important debate.

Ivor Timson MSc (Econ)

Sack the lot!

The corrupt and greedy bankers have clearly let down their very own system. So much for responsible capitalism. Surely, now the time has come for an accountable National Investment Bank and a People’s Bank aligned with all the Countrywide Credit Unions.

The system is in disarray and totally discredited and even the deficit reduction plan has failed. Time for a real campaign and genuine discussion on these alternatives and a new and fair system. We simply cannot allow our precious services to be further fragmented and privatised for the Banks incompetence and failure.

Economists and gobbledegook!

The Government recently offered i’ts “final offer” on pensions. Danny Alexander stated that “the new pensions will be substantially more affordable to alternative providers. By offering transferred staff the right to remain members of the public service scheme, we are no longer requiring private, voluntary and social enterprise providers to take on the risks of defined benefit that deter many from bidding for contracts in the first place.”

Similarly, in his first letter of remit to the new chairman of the School Teachers Review Board, Michael Gove asked them to report on “how the pay framework for teachers should best be made more market facing in local areas,” with reference to the private sector.

It is not just education that is under attack. The same process is being carried out across all public services, as the recent passage of the high-profile NHS Bill shows. Against this background interest rates remain at 0.5 per cent which we all subsidise at the expense of savers and others.

We face not just savage austerity cuts, but a politically motivated attempt to completely restructure the British economy and effectively abolish the public sector. The economists continue to re- write their own history and talk gobbledegook. This helps to pave the way to move again to a private sector for all, which has been deemed a complete failure as has the capitalist system. And the rich get richer, while many suffer in poverty.

Wage freeze for the rich!

Fightback on wages as the rich get richer. 

Result of years of below-inflation pay increases, a two-year pay freeze since 2010 and refusal by local government employers to pay the Chancellor’s promised £250 to the 69% earning less than £21,000 during the pay freeze, have recently emerged. For part time workers – more than half the workforce – purchasing power is now at 2002 levels and many are working in poverty. Near were I live in Birmingham, the Council prepare for even more cuts which should be resisted. Key findings from the report from Unison, titled Living on the Edge include:

1. 1.7 million people worked in local government in England and Wales in 2010 – around a quarter of the 6.9 million working in the public sector. Three quarters of the local government workforce are women. Well over half of the workforce works part time.

2. Local government (like the rest of the public sector) has a much higher proportion of women in its workforce than the private sector. Local government has a much higher proportion of part time jobs than the rest of the public sector.

3. Two thirds of the jobs in local government are manual or clerical jobs – almost exactly the same proportion as in the private sector. In the rest of the public sector, only one third of jobs are manual or clerical.

4. Eight per cent of full-time workers and 38% of part-time workers in local government earned less than the Living Wage of £7.20 an hour in 2011. This is a quarter of the workforce.

5. Both full time and part time hourly earnings in local government are well below those in the public sector as a whole. Part time hourly earnings in local government are above those in the private sector (where a quarter earned £6 an hour or less in 2010).

6. High inflation coupled with a pay freeze that began in April 2010 slashed the real value of earnings in local government by 13% between April 2009 and February 2012. A fall this big is unprecedented. Continuing high inflation means that earnings will fall further still.

7. Thanks to the pay freeze and inflation, typical fulltime hourly earnings in local government have sunk back to the levels of the early 1990s. Typical parttime hourly earnings have fallen back to 2002 levels.

8. Low paid local government employees usually need benefits and tax credits to keep their household out of poverty. The higher but still modest minimum income standard is rarely reached.

9. Low paid local government workers and their families are in a financially precarious position. A reduction in hours, a child leaving school or a partner whose eligibility for contribution based social security ceases can all take the household to the edge of poverty. This is despite the fact that the local government employee continues to work. Pay for these workers is poverty pay.

10. Quality of service considerations – and in the case of care workers and others in personal service occupations, considerations of the human rights of clients – are grounds for improving the pay and conditions as well as the training of local government employees. The pretence that jobs such as caring for elderly, frail or otherwise vulnerable people requires but little skill is a symptom of our society’s inability to recognise and value some of the things in life that matter most to most of us. 

Thanks to Unison and False Economy.

TUC Birmingham Pensions Justice Day 30 November 2011.

A wonderful display of solidarity ensued over the region and indeed the country. Tens of thousands took to the streets in Birmingham, as many also attended picket lines and the many local rallies. People of all ages joined this mass display of strength in support of pensions justice. Almost every public sector union took part in this co-ordinated action called by the TUC. Pickets were out in force at most larger council and civil service buildings, with earlier pickets at refuse collection depots and other locations.They enjoyed huge public support.

A New Banking System? – time for real change!

At long last there now does seem to be some debate about our society and the need for change. There was recently even a mention and a debate about real societal change, and fundamental changes to the banking system on the Jeremy Vine radio show. And the ‘occupation movement’ does seem to be having a positive impact. We are also seeing widespread opposition to our bankrupt and failed system.

As Marx once explained, a developed credit system both gives greater elasticity to capitalist production and accentuates capital’s tendencies to overproduction and overspeculation.

The crash of 2008 was big enough that governments had to nationalise or bail out major banks, “socialism for the rich”, as it was termed and world trade shrank sharply in 2009.

A crisis, as Marx explained, brings “a tremendous rush for means of payment, when credit suddenly ceases and only cash payments have validity”. Except that in today’s capitalism there is no real “hard” cash. Every form of “cash”, US dollars, British pounds, euros ,  are only IOU’s issued by one government or another.

The lurch of capitalist policy away from neo-liberalism which many predicted in 2008, has not happened and now surely will not happen.
Capital is still sunken on credit. The global amount outstanding on foreign exchange derivatives rose from $14 trillion in 1999 to $63 trillion in mid-2008, then fell back somewhat, but has risen again to $69 trillion plus in mid-2010.

Governments have more extensive credit than banks. They were able to intervene to save the banks in 2008. But that intervention strained their credit, and in a time when global credit markets were becoming tighter. At the same time governments’ incomes shrank because of the downturn in trade and production following the financial crash and political blunders.

Most governments now depend on getting credit in global financial markets, not on siphoning savings from their own citizens as they used to. For eurozone governments the discipline is especially tight, since they cannot print their own money, and the European Central Bank was set up with rules that limit its assistance to governments. They are trying to change the rules as I type.

Some eurozone governments were bound to run into credit difficulties. The first were Greece, Ireland, and Portugal. And most countries have had bail outs and are in deep trouble or indeed bankrupt.

The present and ongoing crisis could well lead to the collapse of the eurozone, and a retreat by European governments back to national currencies. The impact of that on European capital, which depends day to day on the low costs of doing business across Europe, will be huge. They will find some way to patch things up for a while. As the previous so-called “bail-outs” patched things up for a while, only to make them worse in the long term. We need a long term plan, for the future of us all.

We should however, not underestimate the power and resourcefulness of a system based upon capital. The cuts programmes in Ireland and Spain are brutal, but they are having an effect, so far, in capitalist terms. Since the EU’s leaders know that the crisis is so dangerous, it is possible they will do something more radical than expected. But radical enough to restabilise government is debatable and they are running out of options and getting very desperate. Unfortunately, wars have historically been a ‘solution’ and a consequence. Real progressive changes are however now possible.

The project of the European single currency was botched from the outset, in 1999-2000, hurried through on the wave of capitalist triumphalism typical of the time, and with questions about how it would deal with tricky imbalances glossed over. Credit and fictitious capital became the norm, but we were all living on borrowed time. The Eurozone crisis is only one part of the world wide crisis.

So back to today, Greece’s debt should be cancelled, and a new beginning made. Banks should be nationalised under democratic control and a Social- Worldwide Bank should be created. Social equality and workers’ rights should be levelled up across the continent. And new plans should be formulated, which draw upon the lessons of these disasters and create a fair and less greedy society. Again, I call for a real debate about a real change of society.

And on a completely different note the Birmingham March and Rally went very well, despite the pouring rain. Thanks for the considerable support.


Birmingham March and Rally- 27 October- 12- noon.

Well just one more. Bad news about the NHS and the Lords vote. But we must continue the struggle and call for all the groups and organisations to unite in opposition to the new proposals.

And for information a number of Rallies and demonstrations will be taking place over the coming months. This is just one of them called by the WMPC.

The Regional Council are organising their own Demonstration and March in Birmingham. The start will be at 11.30 am from-T&G House, Broad street, Birmingham on Thursday the 27th October 2011- to arrive in Chamberlain Square at 12.00 noon  to 1.30 pm, in the amphitheatre in front of the City Library. The meeting will be addressed by speakers from the WMPC, the GMB Trade Union and the Wholesale Market Federation. The Fair Pensions for all and rights in retirement campaign week, is being called by the NPC. Join us for the March or the rally at 12 noon. E- mail or Telephone the Secretary for further details. Placards, banners and speakers. Please note the change to Chamberlain Square 12 noon- 27 October 2011. See you all there!      Visit the site 

New danger zone!

World markets have entered a “new danger zone”, according to the president of the World Bank. Robert Zoellick,  investors had lost confidence in the economic leadership of several key countries.

“What’s happened in the past weeks is there is a convergence of some events in Europe and the United States that has led many market participants to lose confidence in economic leadership of some of the key countries,” Mr Zoellick said.

“I think those events combined with some of the other fragilities in the nature of recovery have pushed us into a new danger zone. I don’t say those words lightly.”

The eurozone faced more serious problems, he said, with a lot of member states “moving from drama to trauma”.  There are other major signs of a mounting housing crisis.  Further words of gloom and despondency, which unfortunately have been the common thread throughout this blog.  I have offered both a prognosis and a diagnosis to the current economic crisis and have tried to evaluate the current state of economics.  Urgent action is clearly now required within this societal system; but leadership, the required knowledge, or indeed the desire to radically change is sadly lacking. We continue to worship a unfettered market even thought it has abysmally failed and can only continue to fail.

For these reasons, I am concluding this blog and it’s posts to commence a fresh one offering a new economic zone.  Hope you have enjoyed at least some of the posts.  Thanks for the e-mails.                      Ivor Timson  MSc (Econ)