The Labour Government

It’s a never ending cycle and an argument that makes no sense.

We have more pensioners because we are living longer. Immigration is the answer yet no one thinks they too will grow old and add to the pensioner numbers so then what? Even more immigration?

Nearly 70 million now and it’s not enough? 75/80/85? How many is enough to satisfy the needs and as I keep asking, how does this economy or our services cope with such numbers?

Business wants cheap labour and doesn’t care where it comes from and politicians up until now have been happy to facilitate it.
It doesn’t have to be cheap labour, no reason the wage for immigrants can’t be the same as anyone else in fact it should be. You still haven’t offered a solution to where the workers come from if the population is aging. Okay if you say it’s not immigration thats an opinion but then who? What’s your plan.
 
It’s a never ending cycle and an argument that makes no sense.

We have more pensioners because we are living longer. Immigration is the answer yet no one thinks they too will grow old and add to the pensioner numbers so then what? Even more immigration?

Nearly 70 million now and it’s not enough? 75/80/85? How many is enough to satisfy the needs and as I keep asking, how does this economy or our services cope with such numbers?

Business wants cheap labour and doesn’t care where it comes from and politicians up until now have been happy to facilitate it.
The larger the population, the greater the decline in public services.
 
The larger the population the more people producing goods and services and paying tax that pays for those services.

Not to mention that larger population staffing a lot of those essential services like the NHS.
Waiting times for operation's and getting seen if you are unlucky enough to have to go to A&E are far worse than they used to be. So yes I've seen a big decline in public services. They haven't kept pace with the population growth.
 
Is no-one else raising even an eyebrow at Shabana "my religion is the most Important thing in my life" Mahmood, our Muslim home secretary announcing potential visa restrictions on Angola, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and Namibia - all of which are Christian countries and from none of which are there many illegal immigrants.

Whereas she made no such anouncements relating to Afghanistan, Pakistan, Syria etc from which we have tens of thousands of illegal immigrants. And coincidentally these happen to be Muslim countries?

Nothing to see here? I'm sure it's just coincidence.
 
The larger the population the more people producing goods and services and paying tax that pays for those services.

Not to mention that larger population staffing a lot of those essential services like the NHS.
That's how it's supposed to work. Not how it has worked / is working. Demonstrably.
 
Is no-one else raising even an eyebrow at Shabana "my religion is the most Important thing in my life" Mahmood, our Muslim home secretary announcing potential visa restrictions on Angola, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and Namibia - all of which are Christian countries and from none of which are there many illegal immigrants.

Whereas she made no such anouncements relating to Afghanistan, Pakistan, Syria etc from which we have tens of thousands of illegal immigrants. And coincidentally these happen to be Muslim countries?

Nothing to see here? I'm sure it's just coincidence.
Lost it.
 
It doesn’t have to be cheap labour, no reason the wage for immigrants can’t be the same as anyone else in fact it should be. You still haven’t offered a solution to where the workers come from if the population is aging. Okay if you say it’s not immigration thats an opinion but then who? What’s your plan.

cheap labour is the hook - see also man of fighting age and illegal migrants - its a right wing trope.

Plumbers were earning loads we were told in the early 2000's yet at the same time Polish plumbers were putting British plumbers on the dole at the same time when clearly British plumbers charging £1 an hour less could have simply undercut them. The rhetoric has never made any sense but the gullible will swallow it.

I know loads of people in my boat - encouraged to have a private pension so are retiring early - no reason and no desire to go back. You work 43 years you have done your time. An apprentice isn't made overnight - it took me a number of years to get the professional qualifications needed to progress. We haven't pulled any ladders up behind us the employers took them away - we have long since stopped "training our own" up.

Immigrants are not the panacea but they are part of a mixed answer. I'd much rather have a 30 year old firefighter attending an emergency at my home rather than a 72 year old just because the latter was born in the UK. In any event that 72 year old will eventually retire and the plan you were asking him for doesn't explain who is training the youngster and where are they coming from? There is no plan.
 
Is no-one else raising even an eyebrow at Shabana "my religion is the most Important thing in my life" Mahmood, our Muslim home secretary announcing potential visa restrictions on Angola, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and Namibia - all of which are Christian countries and from none of which are there many illegal immigrants.

Whereas she made no such anouncements relating to Afghanistan, Pakistan, Syria etc from which we have tens of thousands of illegal immigrants. And coincidentally these happen to be Muslim countries?

Nothing to see here? I'm sure it's just coincidence.

I don't care about her or anyone's religion BUT when I heard that yes my eyebrows were raised because when two men I don't really like were in charge ran into religion and Blair wanted to echo Bush with "God bless the UK" at then end of his announcement over the Iraq War Alistair Campbell said no we don't do religion in UK politics.
 
“We need cheap labour”

That’s the argument being made by him and those like him.
It's just "we need labour". Even if you were right and higher wages would persuade Brits to pick or pack food, or wipe arses in care homes, costs of care would go up, costs of food would go up (or we'd import more*) and you'd be paying more in shops or in council tax to pay those wages. I don't think you are prepared for that.

* I can't be bothered searching for the UK food business that rather employ Polish workers here just decided to grow food in Poland and import it.
 
Waiting times for operation's and getting seen if you are unlucky enough to have to go to A&E are far worse than they used to be. So yes I've seen a big decline in public services. They haven't kept pace with the population growth.

The past year is the first time in 15 years that waiting lists have fallen. Still high mind.
 
The past year is the first time in 15 years that waiting lists have fallen. Still high mind.
Fallen a bit yeah, and I'm not blaming Labour, far from it. Public services in this country have gone down the toilet in the last few decades though.

There was a time and I'm in my 50's, so not that long ago, if you felt ill you didn't need to make a Doctor's appointment, you just went to the Doctor's surgery, you'd be given a number and you'd wait in line. Everyone would get seen, and if you had to wait over an hour, you'd be very unlucky, because there would be enough doctors to see everyone.

It's exactly the same for people needing surgery, or people going to A&E, people used to get treated so much quicker.

Look at the Police, does anyone ever see them patrolling the streets like they used to, half the crime is ignored. I could go on and on, the roads are full of potholes, grid's are blocked and never get unblocked, people can't find a new dentist. Social services, have been run down.

So yes, the larger the population, the worse public services get, and I ain't changing my mind until things improve. I won't be holding my breath.
 
The median wages in Ireland vs the UK is a fair point. But how much people earn is only half the story.

The result of their much higher GDP per capita is that they have the ability to either have lower taxes - making everyone better off - or spend the money on better infrastructure and public services - that benefits everybody.
That's true, but it's also true that it's the sort of policy that can only work in a small country. Google running huge parts of their books through Ireland and paying a relatively small amount in tax is a huge benefit for Ireland. Them doing the same thing in the UK would be a far smaller benefit to the UK taxpayer simply because there are far more of us, and the subsequent drop in tax revenue from the sort of broad range of businesses that operate in the UK would mean that it would be a net loss for the treasury. Ireland, on the other hand, is massively exposed to the fortunes of a handful of huge tech companies. If they pull out, they suddenly have a huge black hole in their finances, which I'd argue is a far bigger risk than anything Brown or Blair did.

One of the reasons people are so unhappy in the UK with higher taxes is that we get so very little back for it. Our roads and general infrastructure is falling to bits. Our pension sysem is one of the least generous amongst developed countries, our health service is woeful compared to other countries, in terms of facilities, waiting times and critically, clinical outcomes. The reality is we have high taxes already AND shit public services.
And yet a huge amount of that is because those tax revenues aren't being used to pay for public services, they're being used to pay private companies to provide public services, who have consistently done a shit job and cut corners to increase shareholder profit. The other place a large amount of tax revenue goes to is paying off the debt caused by Covid and the previous financial crash. But Ireland and the UK are roughly the same in this respect, with Ireland's government debt standing at around €50k per person, and the UK's at £42k per person (but a much higher percentage of GDP because of our lower GDP per capita in absolute terms). The other difference is that the UK's is increasing whereas Ireland is managing the pay it off.

This problem has not come about overnight of course. It's been brewing a long time. It started with Blair and Brown inflating the size of the state and funding that with progressively higher taxation, and broadly the same policies have persisted - made worse in fact - by successive Conservative (in name only) governments.

We need a reset. If we are to be wealthy ever again, we need a much better growth agenda, pro-business, anti-woke, lower tax environment. Carry on as we are and we will just see progressive decline further and futher.
Potentially, but I can't help but notice when people look for examples of this being successful, they always point to various forms of tax havens with tiny populations that are basically able to fund their public services by effectively leeching off the revenues made in the more populous neighbouring countries. Nobody's made a trillion dollar company in Ireland, yet somehow all of the profits of huge American corporations are funnelled through there and that's presented as some sort of economic success story. And it is for the people of Ireland (if you ignore the insane cost of living and property prices), but it's also not something the UK can follow, because we don't have a bunch of countries that are 10 or 20 times the size next to us that we can offer to do the books for and have a free trade agreement with. Not that the city of London doesn't try, of course. The only thing that will happen if the UK reduces corporation tax (and let's not pretend the Tories didn't do it) is that revenues from corporation tax will go down.

From 2010 to 2017, the Tories reduced corporation tax from 28% to 19%. They then increased it back to 25%. I haven't looked at the effect that had on overall tax revenues from business, but the standard conservative line is that reducing the rate of tax will actually increase overall tax income, because there will be more business happening. Yet it's quite revealing that when the Tories were in need of more tax revenue, rather than reducing it further, they increased it a significant amount. Admittedly, their experiment with reducing tax was obliterated by their equally idiotic decision to leave the EU, so we might never know whether it would have worked. I don't necessarily disagree with the principle. Denmark has always operated quite a business-friendly environment, with more of the tax burden on the individual, but it is also clearly a high tax - high public services economy. Japan, on the other hand, manages to maintain hundreds of huge multinational corporations while having quite a high rate of corporate tax.
 
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The larger the population the more people producing goods and services and paying tax that pays for those services.

Not to mention that larger population staffing a lot of those essential services like the NHS.

We have evidence that what you have just said simply isn’t true nor the case.

As of June 2025 there was 1.26 million non UK born people claiming universal credits so how does their immigration benefit?
 
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It doesn’t have to be cheap labour, no reason the wage for immigrants can’t be the same as anyone else in fact it should be. You still haven’t offered a solution to where the workers come from if the population is aging. Okay if you say it’s not immigration thats an opinion but then who? What’s your plan.

Poland has come up with a novel idea of supporting and promoting the family.

Take a look.

Mass immigration isn’t their preferred option.
 
Inflation down to 3.6% from 3.8% so a positive fall.

Still too high and food prices are still rising which hurts us all.
 
We have evidence that what you have just said simply isn’t true nor the case.

As of June 2025 there was 1.26 million non UK born people claiming universal credits so how does their immigration benefit?

Because there is over 10m non UK born people in the UK. I wouldn't presume that close to 7 million people claiming universal credit that were born in England or Ireland are representative of the English/Irish born community so I'm not sure why I'd do it for the UK/Irish born.

We're I to get sick or lose my job I may well end up on universal credit. And I've paid taxes here for a quarter of a century.

In the main, most migrants cant claim universal credit for five years until they get settled status (I know I couldnt have).

And the majority of foreign born UC claimants are Europeans that lived here pre Brexit and had the right to remain.
 
cheap labour is the hook - see also man of fighting age and illegal migrants - its a right wing trope.

Plumbers were earning loads we were told in the early 2000's yet at the same time Polish plumbers were putting British plumbers on the dole at the same time when clearly British plumbers charging £1 an hour less could have simply undercut them. The rhetoric has never made any sense but the gullible will swallow it.

I know loads of people in my boat - encouraged to have a private pension so are retiring early - no reason and no desire to go back. You work 43 years you have done your time. An apprentice isn't made overnight - it took me a number of years to get the professional qualifications needed to progress. We haven't pulled any ladders up behind us the employers took them away - we have long since stopped "training our own" up.

Immigrants are not the panacea but they are part of a mixed answer. I'd much rather have a 30 year old firefighter attending an emergency at my home rather than a 72 year old just because the latter was born in the UK. In any event that 72 year old will eventually retire and the plan you were asking him for doesn't explain who is training the youngster and where are they coming from? There is no plan.
The training issue comes back to the sell off of our utilities and PFI contracts. Most of the people who are slightly older than me at work were trained on the job by CEGB (the forerunner of national grid), British Rail, British Telecom, British Gas etc. They had apprenticeship programmes taking kids from 16 and developed them over 2 to 4 years, following it up with ongoing training. The training programmes were second to none allowing kids to do high quality ONCs, HNCs and literally be an understudy, with lots of time given.

Virtually all our senior staff came via these routes or the remnants of them following privatisation. That includes the CEO of the business I work for, who's on $6m plus per year plus options.

Fast forward to today, apprenticeship programmes seem to consist of taking A level students or similar, bunging them on a degree at an ex poly, which offers a course far worse than the old HNC and because its all private businesses, focusing on them generating revenue rather than development.

Is it any wonder why we have a skills shortage and low productivity.
 
cheap labour is the hook - see also man of fighting age and illegal migrants - its a right wing trope.

Plumbers were earning loads we were told in the early 2000's yet at the same time Polish plumbers were putting British plumbers on the dole at the same time when clearly British plumbers charging £1 an hour less could have simply undercut them. The rhetoric has never made any sense but the gullible will swallow it.

I know loads of people in my boat - encouraged to have a private pension so are retiring early - no reason and no desire to go back. You work 43 years you have done your time. An apprentice isn't made overnight - it took me a number of years to get the professional qualifications needed to progress. We haven't pulled any ladders up behind us the employers took them away - we have long since stopped "training our own" up.

Immigrants are not the panacea but they are part of a mixed answer. I'd much rather have a 30 year old firefighter attending an emergency at my home rather than a 72 year old just because the latter was born in the UK. In any event that 72 year old will eventually retire and the plan you were asking him for doesn't explain who is training the youngster and where are they coming from? There is no plan.
You were in a boat too:)
 

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