Wednesday, 30 April 2014
Universal Credit roll out to whole North West England in June 2014
Full universal credit to be rolled out across whole of North West http://t.co/rTeci9CAKf
— 24dash Breaking News (@24dash) April 30, 2014
Full universal credit to be rolled out across whole of North West » Universal Credit » http://t.co/S2O1MKnXsI http://t.co/eG6hlEFwr0
— Bernadette Horton (@PinkWaferBelle) April 30, 2014
Full universal credit to be rolled out across whole of North West » Universal Credit » 24dash.com
Tuesday, 29 April 2014
Job centre insider on UKGov propaganda targeting of vulnerable fake statistics & fake jobs
Jobcentre adviser: “The reforms have been designed to hide the numbers of unemployed.” http://t.co/btcRymcVQs
— RealFare (@RealFareUK) April 29, 2014
Jobcentre adviser: "The reforms have been designed to hide the numbers of unemployed." http://t.co/FFNeZR1Vtb via @RealFareUK
— liane gomersall (@ligomersall) April 29, 2014
Jobcentre adviser: "The reforms have been designed to hide the numbers of unemployed." http://t.co/HpAFvPvnvR via @RealFareUK
— Rick B (@TenPercent) April 29, 2014
Monday, 28 April 2014
Sunday, 27 April 2014
Thursday, 24 April 2014
Wednesday, 23 April 2014
UK to introduce Mass 'slave labour' Workfare or daily signing on
Mass Workfare Begins Next Monday … Or Does It? | the void http://t.co/Rw7CF2IJ7K
— Samuel Miller (@Hephaestus7) April 23, 2014
The cost to the public where private companies will be paid
£ millions and £ billions to cover all the extra work created by schemes and
daily signing on queues, will also impact on the environment, with millions of
extra journeys. This will affect public transport, including during rush hours
with millions of extra commuters of the jobless on their daily journeys to
spend hours queuing up at job centres or travelling to and from places they
will spend all day working for no pay and so all the extra travel costs will
have to be paid for by the government, as well as extra transport pollution
affecting greenhouse gasses, causing congestion on the roads and overcrowded
public transport, all to no avail for pay and benefits at far less than
subsistence, so not alleviating food banks or malnutrition in UK.
It will add to the country’s petrol consumption and wasting
time of job seekers with no advantage for gaining real work that would add a
standard of living for job seekers instead of a measly existence at just 10% of
average wages or 20% of minimum wage. Yet with most of the outgoings anyone has
on minimum wage jobs, but far below the level required to live on in UK, where
cost of living is amongst the highest in the world. Just to exist requires £
hundreds every month to pay utility bills, water, gas, electric, TV licence (needed
to pay BBC to broadcast propaganda and required for a computer or DVD player,
to play disks bought when people had jobs before they were made redundant, even
if don’t watch any TV), household insurance, mortgages or rent, council tax also
now comes from benefit, all travel, all not options, everything, not leaving
enough for food. If anything the new regime will lower the chances of finding
work due to all the extra time travelling or spent working as unpaid slaves.
UKGov/DWP latest #Orwellian #1984 doublespeak: disabled "follow career dreams"
More and more disabled people following their career dreams - Press releases - GOV.UK https://t.co/UMQTirSXDG
— Samuel Miller (@Hephaestus7) April 23, 2014
UKGov/DWP with statistics by ONS
Official statement
from the 'Ministry of Truth'
https://www.gov.uk/government/news/more-and-more-disabled-people-following-their-career-dreams
Ministry of Truth:
1984-what-was-role-ministry-truth?
Ministry_of_Truth
Monday, 21 April 2014
Oxfam and Just Fair Reports indicate UK Government breaches UN Human Rights on Food and Shelter
UKGov violates @UN & Generva convention #HumanRights for basic food [& shelter] http://t.co/xYkFrgZWSf … http://t.co/2B1iByeTgO
— Tiger (@ImaTigerrr) April 22, 2014
UKGov condemned by @oxfamgb as UKs poorest 2 million made to suffer as poverty safety net removed http://t.co/OOTylW96zy
— Tiger (@ImaTigerrr) April 22, 2014
UKGov blows hole in safety net 1.75 million UK poorest 'Perfect storm' @oxfamgb http://t.co/wIWVUV6Rj0
— Tiger (@ImaTigerrr) April 22, 2014
Oxfam:
Two million of the poorest families pushed deeper into poverty by welfare reforms -
Our new report on UK #poverty: http://t.co/IDi2eqiKWG
— Oxfam (@oxfamgb) April 22, 2014
Oxfam warns 1.75m families are poorer after 'perfect storm' of Coalition benefit cuts http://t.co/5T6yZnurXa
— Oxfam News Team (@oxfamgbpress) April 22, 2014
Tuesday's i front page: "Welfare reforms hit two million poorest families, says Oxfam. Holes blown in safety net." pic.twitter.com/pt1NA22s2j
— Ben Phillips (@benphillips76) April 21, 2014
WOW Campaign:
Oxfam warns 1.75m families are poorer after 'perfect storm' of Coalition benefit cuts http://t.co/jDKXVanUEt #WOWcampaign #foodbanks
— WOWcampaign (@WOWpetition) April 22, 2014
More on Just Fair Consortium Just-fair 'freedomfromhunger' Just-fair - 'Right to food'
Chief Executive of
Oxfam Tweets on mainstream media articles on new mass poverty report on UK
poor:
Welfare reforms hit two million poorest families, says Oxfam. Holes blown in safety net." pic.twitter.com/cdh28fGGRk”
— Mark Goldring (@Mark_Goldring1) April 22, 2014
Welfare cuts drive UK's poorest families deeper into poverty, says #Oxfam http://t.co/OOkhYNFuSd”
— Mark Goldring (@Mark_Goldring1) April 22, 2014
Children's Society:
1.75m low income families see benefits cut as a result of welfare changes, finds new @oxfamgb/@NewPolicyInsti report: http://t.co/PDgrzLkBQq
— Children's Society (@childrensociety) April 22, 2014
ITV News:Oxfam: Britain's poorest made poorer by 'perfect storm' of welfare changes http://t.co/sY58XBXBxn
— ITV News (@itvnews) April 21, 2014
Salford CAB:
Welfare cuts drive UK's poorest families deeper into poverty, says Oxfam http://t.co/ZlCJcqKb4u via @guardian
— Salford CAB (@SalfordCAB) April 22, 2014
Also
a tweet from Liverpool Housing Association Officer, relating to Mirror article:
1.75m families poorer after 'perfect storm' of #benefitcuts warns @oxfamgbpolicy http://t.co/lvAy47zaaL via @dailymirror #UKhousing
— Alix Johnson (@Alix_Riverside) April 22, 2014
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/two-million-poorest-families-hit-by-welfare-reforms-says-oxfam-9273531.html
http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2014/apr/22/welfare-cuts-drive-uk-poorest-poverty-oxfam?CMP=twt_gu
http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/oxfam-warns-bedroom-tax-benefits-3440624
Tweet by @foodpoverty
Charities are urging the government to make sure people have a basic right to food. http://t.co/Ua1r6tLdSO #foodpoverty #foodbanks
— foodpoverty (@foodpoverty) April 22, 2014
Just Fair Collaboration on poverty and food
crisis for poor in UK:
"It is our opinion that the UK has violated the human right to food" @JamieBurton29
http://t.co/wd3QiGH57O
— Just Fair (@JustFairUK) April 22, 2014
"Anti-poverty campaigners ... claiming Cameron's administration is breaking international law on the right to food"
http://t.co/wd3QiGH57O
— Just Fair (@JustFairUK) April 22, 2014
More related tweets:
Oxfam warns 1.75m families are poorer after 'perfect storm' of Coalition benefit cuts http://t.co/gV6UiwHahg (via @oxfamgb)
— Andy S (@andy_s_64) April 22, 2014
Welfare cuts drive UK's poorest families deeper into poverty, #theperfectstorm http://t.co/U2kV6pNbYi #ukhousing #ukpoverty social housing
— William Shortall (@MerseyNorthBM) April 22, 2014
Friday, 18 April 2014
Jelly Fish reacts to encounter with Cameron on luxury holiday
A real hero this jellyfish ;-) ~ The Admin Team http://t.co/14z9OH6Gdk
— soniapoultonnews (@SPNEWSTV) April 18, 2014
http://t.co/r91BkhdPLj
This made me giggle,... http://t.co/OzaL5OYrqb
— soniapoultonnews (@SPNEWSTV) April 18, 2014
Artist Taxi Driver on Holiday for a few days
What a beautiful morning..taking few days off
— ARTIST TAXI DRIVER (@chunkymark) April 18, 2014
Thursday, 17 April 2014
Student loan repayments will affect many more than realise
Student loan repayments rise cumulative advancing end loaded &starts at less than current median av wage https://t.co/APL5mdfGqI
— Tiger (@ImaTigerrr) April 17, 2014
Did Tories really abolish 50% top tax rate? Did you spot stealthy 51% tax rate for graduates on more than £43k? http://t.co/NgxCTbCwVd
— Hari RippedOffBriton (@RippedOffBriton) April 17, 2014
Student Loans company include a means to work out repayments, but it has to be realised is based on current interest rates and incomes:
Student Finance calculator
Figures obtained from the calculator are not guaranteed to
stay as they are, as it is just a guide that is set at current rates. Also rates
are liable to fluctuate over the 30 years of the loan and may well rise
significantly as current inflation technically according to the current means
of calculation from a basket of measures is at a near historic low, as are wage
increases, which for many transpire into effective wage reductions. But in
decades to come inflation is therefore likely to rise for many reasons, not just
a failing economy, which is also a possibility even with hyper-inflation, but inflation
can also occur in better economies too, so basically it means the current interest
rates are likely to be close to the minimum and could rise much higher over the
next 30 years.
Student loan interest payments are linked to the retail
price index (RPI) inflation. Also as all students will have a large loan and assessed
by banks for mortgages and further loan conditions, not by the amount taken
out, but rather the amount to repaid and remains as a debt if not repaid within
the length of time the loan stands. So if a mortgage is required by a graduate within
30 years of leaving university, it may affect that as a pre-existing loan. If a
graduate gets married to another graduate, they will both possibly have loans,
unless one is wealthier than the other, but assuming both graduates are not wealthy
then the total loan amount combined will be up to double.
Unless a single graduate or two graduates together as partners
are wealthy enough to pay off their entire loans based on course tuition fees
and maintenance loans this debt will remain until their mid-fifties if carried
on from school and college to university or older if a mature student. A maintenance
loan is generally required along with a tuition fees loan for most students. It
is therefore combined and is likely to be at the highest levels for less
well-off students, as even doing part time work whilst at university is often
totally insufficient to cover maintenance, plus the extras of being a student,
which may include travel and taking advantage of a social life whilst at
university. So rather, student jobs pay for the extras, but a maintenance loan
is still required to cover the essentials.
Also the sell-off of the student loan book adds another
complication as it means whatever finance companies take over the loan can
impose their own further conditions and even adjust interest charges and profit
margins, so these too could rise far above current rates.
Student loans
interest rates are set at a premium and are linked to the Retail price Index
(RPI):
Altogether for a
3 year course it is likely to add up to close to £45,000, but as soon as the
money is borrowed its repayment is based on the conditions of the loan,
with interest rates especially from new students starting for 2012 onwards,
being at a high rate and over 30 years, so actual repayment is not the £45,000
borrowed but is a multiple of £45,000. At
current rates, with interest added over a 30 year loan period, the amount to be
repaid can be as much as £160,000, but if rates increase this figure would also
be even higher in tandem with any increase in rates, plus potentially added charges
from a privatised loan book and is likely to be much more. Repayment costs are noticeably higher for those unable to repay the loan sooner, with ironically very highly paid graduates that often have connections to gain the highest paid jobs, a world away from burger flippers or Pound expander stores, having the lowest repayment costs.
Note on RPI inflation:
Even though actual inflation is different from official government
RPI, it all depends on what is included in the index.
For the poorest it’s much higher than more well-off due to
contents of the basket, just as average wages are skewed by massive increases
of better paid jobs negating actual losses of lower paid jobs. Utility bills for
instance make up a much higher percentage of cost of living for poorer people.
However, no matter how much governments like to massage
figures, which they can sometimes do for extended periods like the recent
figures demonstrate, usually there comes a time when even the basket they use is
also affected. They can of course keep changing the contents of the basket to make
it seem lower, but eventually real world finance discovers the fake accounting
and reacts and can do so very rapidly, just as it did in the Weimar Republic.
All told the indication is historically and technically
that RPI should rise and could do so significantly over a 30 year loan period
and as student loans are linked to RPI plus a premium, plus if the loan book is
sold private, additional profit margins, so it’s likely that actual repayments
will be far higher than any figures from loan repayment calculators based on
current rates indicate.
Map showing
comparison of cost per year for degree studies in different European countries,
featured in later blog:
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