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Grace Blakeley HAMMERS Failed Tories Over Cost Of Living Crisis

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  • čas přidán 7. 09. 2022
  • To watch the full hour long episode of The Table and support Byline TV, become a member at byline.tv/join or become a patron at / bylinetv
    _________________________________________________________
    Why aren’t the Government doing enough to solve the cost of living crisis? What are the effective measures it could take to make a meaningful difference?
    Economist & commentator Grace Blakeley joins Byline Times Chief of Investigstions Sam Bright, Actress & Columnist Nicola Thorp, Radio Host Cristo Foufas and host Jemma Forte to form a consensus cabinet and agree simple, practical solutions to the cost of living crisis.
    _________________________________________________________
    To follow us on Twitter, its / bylinetv
    On Facebook its / bylinetv
    Special Thanks to our top tier (Directors Club) Patrons & Members: Ahairy Haggis, Ahmed Hindi, Aisling Jenkins, Alicia Pivaro, Andrew Cave, Angela McPherson, Bernard Hurley, Bob Hammer, Catherine Cox, Cathy McCaul, Chantelle Seddon, Christine Riding, Craig Skinner, Dai Stanton, Daniel Shimmin, Darren, David Cheffings, David Rivier, Deborah Rawlings, Don Cuthbert, Don Syme, Gordy, Harvey Benson, Harwinder Singh Mander, Jenna Bradley, John Anderson, John Mackenzie, Josef, Kath, Ken O’Connell, Mark Newton, Melissa Johnson, Michael Cawley, Nigel Cates, Nigel Davies, Paolo, Pete Martin, Peter Qvortrup, Pranay Manocha, Rob Boney, Rob White, Shabib Rizvi, Simon Perrins, Stephanie Moss, Stuart Clark, Susan Angoy, Tamas Solya, Tim, Tomas Rawlings, Trevor Brown, Vittorio Vagliani, William & William Cooper.

Komentáře • 341

  • @theunknown1426
    @theunknown1426 Před rokem +199

    “When Liz Truss rejects a windfall tax on the £170,000,000,000 profits oil and gas giants are expected to make, it’s worth remembering: She’s a former Shell employee whose party has taken more than £1,500,000 in donations from the oil and gas industry since the last election.”

    • @yellowgreen5229
      @yellowgreen5229 Před rokem +3

      And another Tufton St alumni

    • @jaywalker3087
      @jaywalker3087 Před rokem +29

      She also received £100,000 from BPs CEO wife for her recent campaign for PM!

    • @cragmc8386
      @cragmc8386 Před rokem +24

      Nadhim Zahawi rejected windfall taxes too. No coincidence he has a 2nd job with an oil company which earns him £1.2million per year. I wouldn't be surprised if he, like Truss is anti-renewables.
      Conflicts of interest?

    • @peace.n.blessings5579
      @peace.n.blessings5579 Před rokem +1

      Where do you get these nuggets from?

    • @catherinemartin6258
      @catherinemartin6258 Před rokem +2

      Exactly 👍🏻

  • @guyroberts8932
    @guyroberts8932 Před rokem +161

    That shouty well fed bloke is everything that is wrong with this country. What an absolute helmet

    • @Daniel-San75
      @Daniel-San75 Před rokem

      Some woke lefty types might even call this guy a "fat fuck", but I won't do that, because I am very right wing.

    • @Scitzowicz
      @Scitzowicz Před rokem

      Ol’ shouty do shut up

    • @Deleteyourself83
      @Deleteyourself83 Před rokem +9

      He's clueless

    • @andypeutherer4218
      @andypeutherer4218 Před rokem +4

      helmet... hahahaha.. classic!

    • @bryansmith1404
      @bryansmith1404 Před rokem +3

      He does the rounds. Jeremy vine on 5 etc. Etc. A straight dan wotton.

  • @tillymint7354
    @tillymint7354 Před rokem +35

    OMG it's not all about profits and shareholders, no workers, no profits...

    • @scrumtious1
      @scrumtious1 Před rokem +2

      Exactly! That's all I was thinking the entire time!

    • @LabRat6619
      @LabRat6619 Před rokem

      They think there are too many of us now, they are trying to kill us off with multi pronged attack.

  • @terrypankhurst7601
    @terrypankhurst7601 Před rokem +21

    The geezer in the suit doesn't look like he has ever missed a meal so how would he know how we feel.

    • @PSYCHIC_PSYCHO
      @PSYCHIC_PSYCHO Před rokem

      Actually he lives on a diet of farts, which explains his size

  • @richard127gm
    @richard127gm Před rokem +28

    When Cristo says I want to help those who really need it. He should spend some time going through the bullying, humiliating, degrading and spiteful hoops required to receive any benefits under this cruel Tory Government. The third parties running assessments and Universal Credit management will do anything to punish anyone that dares to claim help.

    • @Anon-xd3cf
      @Anon-xd3cf Před rokem +1

      Its actually worse than you think (if thats possible)...
      If you make a new claim for benefits NOW, you will not qualify for the cost of living payments pitifully small as they are.
      And changes in circumstances (which many are having right now) will see payments delayed or changed.
      This winter will be deadly for many thousands of people... probably worse than the first winter with covid (especially since covid isnt gone, sure it is much more mild but people will be a lot less fit to fight it off if they are cold and hungry). If there is a bad flu this winter...many will die.
      The flu had a bit of a break the last couple years as people isolated... but this winter people will be forced to come together to share warmth...if there is a flu this year... bad things will happen.
      UC (and remaining legacy benefits) have cost tens of thousands of lives already, the odds of that number not increasing are vanishingly small.

    • @notgarybrown
      @notgarybrown Před rokem +1

      Also worth remembering that your benefits cease from the DAY you start a new job - So absolutely no support to get you through your first month of bills, bus fair, food and clothing in your new job. It's abhorrant.

    • @OreshikaIsGreat
      @OreshikaIsGreat Před rokem +1

      I genuinely believe my father would still be here now if not for the assessment process, he was constantly terrified of them coming back for him, he survived pancreatic cancer and the help he needed was given and removed from him several times due to repeat assessments having different outcomes each time, the stress did him in, he died from pneumonia after falling into a diabetic coma, if he'd still had a care worker check in or a social worker at hand perhaps they'd have got to him in time but he died with neither of those, almost a decade has passed but the dwp are still as negligent and underhanded as they have always been.
      The last time I dealt with them I accompanied a friend who had chronic bladder and bowel conditions, she didn't go to the toilet while in the waiting room and was deducted points due to that observation which was enough to take her out of the support group and she lost £100 a month from her esa claim, she had to take it on the chin as she didn't have any savings in reserve to be able to take the hit of not having her benefit payments while she went to appeal, she later caught covid and almost died but she feels more positive now about assessments because she was diagnosed with long covid and will probably be able to maintain her stay in the support group because of that, I could cry at the absolute state of the standards set for the most vulnerable people in our society, I'll never forgive or forget.

    • @aaroningl
      @aaroningl Před rokem

      In such a misogynistic world, single mothers do alright.

  • @jake751
    @jake751 Před rokem +100

    Grace blakey is so intelligent and those fools like Andrew pierce and christo can't cope with her knowledge and facts. Keep going grace along with ash x

    • @the_grand_tourer
      @the_grand_tourer Před rokem

      Christo is an overfed, entitled, mansplaining oaf, but Andrew is ok ... and yes Grace is a brainiac.

    • @paddyandhisguitar2831
      @paddyandhisguitar2831 Před rokem +1

      Education vs nonsense rhetoric

    • @indricotherium4802
      @indricotherium4802 Před rokem +2

      Agree totally but someone might advise her to work on her style of communication if she wants to reach a wider audience. It's fast and she runs complex points together without strong emphasis on the key ones. I've been saying for years that the left could learn valuable lessons, not from what the right say but from the way they say it.

    • @ryanbarry34
      @ryanbarry34 Před rokem

      @@indricotherium4802 but ive said for years the right could learn alot from the left on their communication style and actually say something except for fluff and misdirection.
      A valuable lesson, straight to the point, not what they say but how they say it.

    • @indricotherium4802
      @indricotherium4802 Před rokem

      @@ryanbarry34 : "straight to the point, not what they say but how they say it." I rarely agree with anything a Tory politician says but when interviewed they do know how to get their key point out at the front of the answer boldly and concisely. Then they fill in the why's and the how's with a few brief details. Labour spokespeople on the other hand first ramble off on a few long-winded sentences, work their way back to the main point eventually and then spend another two long sentences on shoulds and oughts. In the end they've hardly said anything that stuck.

  • @theunknown1426
    @theunknown1426 Před rokem +16

    There is also the fact Truss is a former Shell employee and no doubt has a lot of shares in that company

  • @lafreeman4558
    @lafreeman4558 Před rokem +48

    Cristo Faufas pushed absolutely non-sense and incompetence this episode. Shameful levels of misinformation and ideology.

    • @freebornaiden7666
      @freebornaiden7666 Před rokem

      He's a morally corrupt pile of shit. It's shameful that he is even invited on to talk about this, and given the same Creedence as actual economists.

    • @tjenadonn6158
      @tjenadonn6158 Před rokem +2

      Orange ribbon, empty head.

    • @lafreeman4558
      @lafreeman4558 Před rokem

      @@tjenadonn6158 ...speak for yourself

  • @vman2kay
    @vman2kay Před rokem +7

    Loving Grace Blakeley! So much more patience than I'd have to debate against some idiots.

  • @alexhatfield9950
    @alexhatfield9950 Před rokem +30

    Why are we subsidising industries who make these vast profits. Companies who take more in subsidies than they pay back in taxes.

    • @billyward349
      @billyward349 Před rokem

      So truss and all Tories make millions off the shares thry are bribed with

    • @silversurfer7341
      @silversurfer7341 Před rokem

      Alex Hatfield
      It's because we keep getting one ruthless Conservative leader/government, after another.
      The Tories are lower then vermin.

    • @count69
      @count69 Před rokem +1

      W E F

  • @ShaunieDale
    @ShaunieDale Před rokem +37

    That bloke arguing so passionately that the big businesses should be allowed to keep these extreme profits! It’s like he’s immune to basic facts and maths. Business turnover is up yet wages are down and profits are enormous. You don’t need to be Einstein to work out that the profits are basically unpaid wages. But if we redistribute that money apparently businesses will suddenly implode. They didn’t before, why should that suddenly happen now?

    • @apedanticpeasant1447
      @apedanticpeasant1447 Před rokem +5

      This!

    • @shamanahaboolist
      @shamanahaboolist Před rokem +7

      He's a cringe worthy shill that has no shame in talking utter nonsense to defend his "tribe".

    • @JonahX-ui9tf
      @JonahX-ui9tf Před rokem +1

      I can guarantee that they will be distributing more wages to the masses, because they have to or no one will have any money, so all business bar oil, gas and food goes bust, that means unemployment and that means no tax revenue at a time when interest rates are climbing, then the UK defaults on its debt and its game over.
      So I can guarantee that wages will climb exponentially as inflation does the same and the pound is devaluated, because that is the over arching plan to reducing the debt, £2.5 trillion the Uk debt is now, the only way to reduce it is to devalue the pound,that’s what they did post world war, we had 1/4 of penny then, now we may as well scrap the penny it has so little value. That’s the economic strategy, people suffer during these times are the elites that run everything have to remain elite, powerful and wealthy, that’s is how it has always been in the uk, anyone who actually works, politicians included are the peasants serving the interests of the elite.

    • @deanrogers6028
      @deanrogers6028 Před rokem

      @@JonahX-ui9tf you can't guarantee anything though can you.
      So stop with the 'i can guarantee ' BS!

    • @JonahX-ui9tf
      @JonahX-ui9tf Před rokem

      @@deanrogers6028 it’s that or everyone bankrupt and homeless, that’s the 2 possible economic outcomes, which is why people will be getting more money as that’s the economic model they have in play

  • @Jimmie16
    @Jimmie16 Před rokem +3

    Wages have been going down every year since the Tories came to power, but profits have risen grotesquely over that same period. The wages of workers ahve gone down every year since the tories came to power and the profits of companies have risen massively. In the last two years profit increase are ridiculous and to expect a £170 billion windfall to go untaxed inflation is caused by corporate greed not by maintaining wages. These companies take their untaxed profits and put them in tax havens but a worker will spend their pay rise. As for the cretin in the suit I have no words.

  • @wolf_of_fenric
    @wolf_of_fenric Před rokem +2

    Grace is fantastic! She should be on everything!

  • @hayzed9491
    @hayzed9491 Před rokem +8

    Woooosh, that went right over his head. Good old conservative thinking, change is hard so let's not do it and think of poor profits the rich will have to endure!!

    • @aaroningl
      @aaroningl Před rokem

      Wellll, that is technically the definition of 'conservative'.

  • @indricotherium4802
    @indricotherium4802 Před rokem +31

    The chubby guy has nothing more to offer than that we are all fated to live beneath the base instincts of profit-maximising corporate executives.

    • @rgghjs9270
      @rgghjs9270 Před rokem

      Yeah it's painful how he just can't even imagine a world without his overlords. What a fucking loser lol

    • @jgmediting7770
      @jgmediting7770 Před rokem +2

      And I’m sure he’s paid a lot to espouse that nonsense.

  • @chapperscornwall
    @chapperscornwall Před rokem +13

    Who is this oaf? He doesn’t deserve a seat at the table. Government have more power than private companies. Simple. The fact that the companies aren’t forced to do as we all so wish is because there’s nobody running government who is willing to take their role seriously and would prefer that their own pockets to be lined with the corps dirty money. That or they are being threatened. Disgusting

  • @DomFurlong
    @DomFurlong Před rokem +28

    Absolute waffle!
    This is the end of greed, the game is up.

  • @BIGBEN9999999
    @BIGBEN9999999 Před rokem +2

    Kudoos to Grace Blakeley, Grreat job!

  • @theunknown1426
    @theunknown1426 Před rokem +6

    Liz Truss...Shell (1996-2000)
    When she left Oxford, Truss joined Shell as a graduate trainee, where she gained her accountancy qualification.
    The scheme reportedly had a focus on "project economics and contract negotiation", and Truss' roles at the company included commercial manager for liquid natural gas shipping, project economics and contract negotiation.

    • @jake751
      @jake751 Před rokem

      No wonder her parents are ashamed of her. No morals/No principles she just wants to be in vogue like the zelenskys and reap the tax payers money. Remember this liberal Democrat who changed to conservative/voted for remain in Brexit and now is a hard brexiter. She will have us in world war 3 before you can say 'pork markets' buckle up everyone you are in for a very bumpy ride. Infact we are in a hand cart to hell. No opposition to give England hope anymore. I've never felt so hopeless for my children's future. 😩

  • @tantrumtv4270
    @tantrumtv4270 Před rokem +30

    All this tells me is there needs to be legislative action to force companies to pay better wages and be unable to raise prices purely to maintain current levels of profit

    • @bonariablackie4047
      @bonariablackie4047 Před rokem

      The main obstacle to that is the Tories and their vicious ideology. Get rid of every Tory, and we might get the legislation required.

    • @tantrumtv4270
      @tantrumtv4270 Před rokem

      @@bonariablackie4047 let's see how long until we force an early general election and replace them

    • @jgmediting7770
      @jgmediting7770 Před rokem

      @@tantrumtv4270 pretty pointless replacing them with a starmer led Labour Party that’s around the same place on the politcal spectrum and serves the same economic interests. We should be demanding better than the lesser of two evils.

    • @tantrumtv4270
      @tantrumtv4270 Před rokem

      @@jgmediting7770 Starmer is far from the Tories my guy 🤣 yes he's trying to act a bit more centre-left atm because he's trying to bridge over the current Tory voters in a massive way but to suggest he's gonna be virtually the same as the tories is the dumbest political statement I've heard all week 🤣

  • @Burt-ok2ho
    @Burt-ok2ho Před rokem +79

    The Tories have driven this country into the ground on every issue. Having said that the political system needs to be morality driven, not cash !

    • @yellowgreen5229
      @yellowgreen5229 Před rokem +3

      But THEY got rich and people vote 4 them!

    • @Dylanesque
      @Dylanesque Před rokem

      @@yellowgreen5229 Bad memories and poor education.
      That's the only two reasons the forgetful and the stupid vote for them.

    • @Burt-ok2ho
      @Burt-ok2ho Před rokem +3

      @@yellowgreen5229 thankyou for your insight !

    • @LabRat6619
      @LabRat6619 Před rokem +5

      Morality is dead in the water. Its the last saving grace of the poor not the rich.

    • @ExpendableRedshirt
      @ExpendableRedshirt Před rokem

      I cannot understand why ordinary workers keep voting Tory? They have always squeezed workers and the poor for the benefit of corporations and the rich.

  • @M_Bamboozled
    @M_Bamboozled Před rokem +6

    The Tory line is just a long-winded, purposely confusing way of saying to the poor: "shut up and know your place!" without actually saying: shut up and know your place!"

    • @theunknown1426
      @theunknown1426 Před rokem

      think the appropriate winded way will be the Tories saying..... money money money it's a rich man's world

  • @TalentedTom91
    @TalentedTom91 Před rokem +18

    That guy’s a total tool! Literally everyone else makes sense apart from him? How can you keep that up? The Tory waffle tactic isn’t working as well as it used to…

    • @socialistsolidarity
      @socialistsolidarity Před rokem +6

      He is a gatekeeper for the capitalist class, so no matter how much you disagree and prove them wrong they will always back the capitalist class.

    • @kalebdaark100
      @kalebdaark100 Před rokem +5

      No not a total fool. He just has a very fixed and firm grip on the modern capitalist view of the world. The idea that profits can and should go down as well as up is utterly unthinkable to him. As soon as you understand that then the rest of his arguments make total sense. Historically it's been a very successful understanding of the world for people with capital. Ultimately it leads to a market collapse obviously, but then the game starts again continually seeking higher profits.

    • @jgmediting7770
      @jgmediting7770 Před rokem +1

      And the confidence he says his twaddle, because that twaddle is what’s in power and is what is platformed as the norm, with the others being ridiculed and dismissed as radical left fantasists.

  • @7ookee
    @7ookee Před rokem +4

    So his argument for not paying workers more money is because they don't want to pay the overheads out of profits. Wages are operational overheads. If you don't pay your overheads you don't have a viable business. Trying to convince people to take less while shareholders take the same or more is a confidence trick.

  • @marccarter1350
    @marccarter1350 Před rokem +5

    The system is broken. Needs to be amended

  • @davidmurphy7332
    @davidmurphy7332 Před rokem +12

    Well, the Tories did say they wanted to unite the country on Brexit, and the economic ruin it has wrought - or at least exacerbated - seems to be doing that.

  • @classlessmass9591
    @classlessmass9591 Před rokem +2

    Really enjoyed this episode. Grace Blakeley was on point.

  • @SteveDorrans
    @SteveDorrans Před rokem +1

    That fella who swallowed a couple of pillows seems to have got some brain damage from whatever they were stuffed with.

  • @islandsedition
    @islandsedition Před rokem +15

    Strategic price controls won't cut it. You need strategic profit controls, and probably even maximum salary controls.

    • @islandsedition
      @islandsedition Před rokem

      To expand something like £1m/year per individual per role or per company owned. (Probably adjusted for inflation in future against 2022 figures)
      Profits should also be limited as these directly impact on inflation despite being a more deliberately flexible variable unlike production costs. Not sure how best to limit it, but probably something like 10% profit limit against annual turnover. Anything made over that has to be either taxed, reinvested into the company or used at the company's discretion for social or environmental projects.

    • @aaroningl
      @aaroningl Před rokem

      Cap on profits is just never gonna happen.

    • @islandsedition
      @islandsedition Před rokem

      It'll only never happen if no one ever puts in the effort to explain how this stuff would work, rather than simply propose a solution and it would make people's lives better.
      If we're resigned to the status quo it makes everything we say or do in or about politics a pointless waste of time that could be better suited to doing something more productive.

  • @kyorin6526
    @kyorin6526 Před rokem +6

    The Tory way - privatise profits, and socialise the debt.

  • @benjones3748
    @benjones3748 Před rokem +9

    Remember folks, carry yourself with the same confidence as Cristo Foufas. If he can go on a debate and spout this utter shite, you can ask that person out.

  • @DaveyNaples
    @DaveyNaples Před rokem +30

    So how hard would it be to legislate to guarantee inflation matching pay rise paid prior to dividends?

    • @markus.schiefer
      @markus.schiefer Před rokem +3

      Ha, got that idea a couple of months ago as well. No dividends should be paid without and profits should be taxed extra. But there is a lot more to it to prevent companies from just let consumers pay for it. Profits and dividends need come down by force.

    • @JK-zx3go
      @JK-zx3go Před rokem

      In a country with politicians hooked on the 'free' market lie. Almost impossible.

    • @ncammann
      @ncammann Před rokem +2

      Particularly The Water Companies. Either re-Nationalize or freeze Shareholder Dividends and CEO pay awards until the investment happens to stop water leaks and sewage spills into rivers are fixed.

    • @luapseirffej
      @luapseirffej Před rokem

      @@ncammann So I got a reply back from Southern Water from my multiple complaints on their Facebook page, and one of my criticisms was stop paying out dividends before you sort out your infrastructure. I was surprised to hear "we stopped paying dividends in 2017." But that's hardly the point, because their share price has continued to rise exponentially. When workers get fairer outcomes, and companies are not focussed on quarterly stock market short-termism, you would expect the share price to drop to reflect an action that is good for the profit making workers, and bad for the shareholders. This is at the heart of the issue with everything we see. Even when they are not paying dividends, the big companies share prices continue to rise, because the market says "we like that you are banking so much of the profits without distributing it to your workforce - keep it up".

  • @jprp999
    @jprp999 Před rokem +1

    Corporate immunity from the law is at the heart of this, while ever corporations have more rights and "voting power" than citizens then we are lost.
    The whole price cap mechanism was always a joke, it's like telling the supermarkets that they could only charge £1 for a loaf of bread then allowing the bakeries to form a conglomerate monopoly and charge the supermarkets £50 per loaf, whilst saying the supermarkets must only sell bread.
    The price control must be at the start of the chain or even all the way through, not in the middle.
    If governments were performing as they should they would dictate to the corporations not the other way around, if the corporations will not comply take away ALL their assets and start locking up their most senior members - after all that's what happens when citizens don't comply with the law.

  • @alexwood1390
    @alexwood1390 Před rokem +2

    "That would never work" he keeps yelling...
    Except for all the times it did, like when strikes won us little things like weekends, sick pay, the 40 hour work week. Funnily enough society didn't collapse under an out of control price spiral all those times, but they will now if we say to corporations: "take less profit and pay your workers fairly".
    Men like him would have been begging us to think of the poor land barons against the vicious serfs

  • @sasserine
    @sasserine Před rokem +2

    Workers haven't had a pay rise, for over a decade.
    Yet prices rose, anyway.
    Thus proving that rising prices have nothing to do with rising wages.
    Prices have increased, because of corporate greed.

    • @jgmediting7770
      @jgmediting7770 Před rokem

      Greed, plus concentrated market and political power. The greed couldn’t be serviced without the latter two things.

  • @keithwilliams744
    @keithwilliams744 Před 2 měsíci +1

    The real problem is leaving corporations that are motivated to suck wealth out the country with the power to set the value of their products, profits and pay. We have been moving further and further away from a tandem of state run industries and infrastructure supported by private enterprise towards an almost totally private enterprise dominated landscape. In the past private enterprise struggled to match the quality, price and wages of state owned enterprises. It is not surprising that the switch has created the imbalances we are seeing today and threaten to widen in the future. It’s not surprising either that the push to create ever increasing minorities out of a collective has seen a switch in the power dynamic. It’s not surprising either that we have a stagnant economy when we have an economic system that’s prime directive is to impoverish the majority and make areas of the nation redundant.

  • @catherinemartin6258
    @catherinemartin6258 Před rokem +3

    People wanted a change for decades and we the people are being ignored by the politicians

  • @DJWESG1
    @DJWESG1 Před rokem +4

    If words were hammers we'd not have a tory party at all. Keynes would have had them all locked in a mh unit.

  • @karlmadden8452
    @karlmadden8452 Před rokem +3

    That guy is typical of Tory thinking to blame for this crisis

  • @theunknown1426
    @theunknown1426 Před rokem +2

    BP, Shell etc... on paper pay 40% tax BUT that 40% tax is GIVEN BACK to BP, Shell as subsidiaries (tax loophole (avoidance) provided by the corrupt UK govt ONLY to the rich and privileged) so BP, Shell pay 0% TAX ....
    BP, shell have made UNEXPECTED EXTRA PROFITS on top of the profits they forecast for this year... (E.G... if you were going to make £10b this year but BECAUSE you've PUT UP YOUR PRICES you've made an extra £90b..... perhaps you should lower you prices).... OH how sad POOR BILLIONAIRE Shell perhaps we should all band together and open up an "PROFITS BANKS" for these billionaires.... you know similar to food banks and warm banks... the PROFITEERING company will leave is a LIE... there will be thousands of companies to replace them.... as is the " trickle down economics" is a LIE... (the only place money trickles to is execs pay packets and shareholders)..... they made more than enough to pay the pension hundreds of times over...... so NO empathy for pensions riding on buses ALL DAY to KEEP WARM (because the can't afford price hikes)... WE ONLY need to care about INVESTOR pensioners

    • @Hugh9
      @Hugh9 Před rokem +1

      Tax loopholes are consciously chosen. Loophole implies mistake. Tax loopholes are not mistakes.

    • @theunknown1426
      @theunknown1426 Před rokem

      @@Hugh9 tax avoidance provided by the treasury govt disguised as tax loopholes

  • @Hugh9
    @Hugh9 Před rokem +3

    excessive profits are stolen wages

  • @lambd01d
    @lambd01d Před rokem +2

    Ultimately, if workers aren't paid a fair wage, then businesses will have diminished profits because they need a market for their goods and services. I've read numerous articles talking about this on Evonomics, One likened the concentration of wealth to a blockage in the blood supply. Money needs to circulate for a healthy economy..

  • @rjvtechnologies
    @rjvtechnologies Před 11 měsíci +1

    For the past six centuries, the United Kingdom has been a parasite, the UK relies heavily on leveraging the economies of other nations to its advantage rather than focusing on domestic production.
    Major economic decisions that impact other countries are made in financial hubs like London and New York.
    This centralized decision-making leads to disparities in how resources and values are determined.
    Historically, since the Industrial Revolution, the UK has been known for extracting resources from foreign lands and to the detriment of those nations.
    This practice is due to British self-entitlement, double standards, and contradictions in its global interactions, United Kingdom seek their interests, and benefit without contributing, a dynamic akin of parasitism.
    Furthermore, the UK's historical entanglement with slavery was not adequately abolished; rather, it underwent a transformation.
    The United Kingdom did not provide "financial compensation" to slave owners.
    Instead, a new form of bondage emerged, wherein debt became the new shackles.
    Through this method, people could be ensnared without direct confrontation.
    Slavery assumed a subtler form, but for this evolution to occur, the slave owners of that era needed the means to perpetuate their control, and that means was money.
    It's crucial to note that it was only in this era that we saw the rise of paper currency and banking, which provided the legal infrastructure for this new method of enslavement.
    Prior to this, slave owners primarily sought land and gold; printed paper held no appeal to them.
    However, they reluctantly embraced this financial system as it became their only means to maintain their dominance.
    Refusing to adapt and continuing with traditional physical chains posed significant risks to their lives, especially in the midst of widespread popular revolutions.
    In anticipation of the fate that befell the French king, who was decapitated during the French Revolution, they presented this deceptive narrative, claiming to liberate slaves while continuing to oppress colonies-a claim that was far from the truth and continues till today in 2023.
    The influx of foreigners into the UK, who initially took on labor-intensive jobs, brought a change in mindset. These newcomers sought equal rights, opportunities, and participation in the country's democratic processes, which, at times, clashed with notions of British superiority.
    UK's constitutional monarchy lacks accountability, with the sovereign not subject to removal or accountability to no one, acting asa if the whole country were just him and his family.
    A new modern Magna Carta MUST be sign with the king that would redefine the relationship between the monarchy and the people, particularly the taxpayers.
    In the past, the Magna Carta represented the interests of lords, and today's taxpayers are seen as the modern equivalent of peasants.
    A reimagined Magna Carta could ensure that the monarchy aligns with contemporary values of democracy and expectations.
    Until such reforms take place, the burden of taxation will always fall on the people and income, while its money with capacity to outperform any actual human labor in terms of generating wealth, it is the income tax that have the heaviest tax burden and fortune is subject to lower taxation.
    These disparities in the tax system need to be addressed to create a fairer and more equitable society, empower me and in 3 days and i will bring financial equality worldwide, my measures are not from the right or left, makes no enemies, makes everyone with a clean slate.

  • @michaelrch
    @michaelrch Před rokem +2

    Christo never had a chance against Grace.

  • @ricado372
    @ricado372 Před rokem

    What he's saying is ' our corporate boot is on your neck and there's nothing you can do to remove it, except it ".

  • @Steventrafford
    @Steventrafford Před rokem +3

    The muppet just doesn’t get it does he🤦‍♂️.

  • @petyrkowalski9887
    @petyrkowalski9887 Před rokem +2

    I am amazed that few people are talking about the real root cause of our soaring energy bills… privatisation by the tories coupled with abject lack of long term investment in power generation to make us independent. We need a sea change in our long term policy on our utilities and take it out of the hands of self-centered politicians and 4 year parliamentary cycles.

  • @Cashback13
    @Cashback13 Před rokem +1

    Does the guys not realise that the levels of profits these companies are making from previous prices are basically 'reserve' FIXED capital not 'ongoing' profit, based on the ticket price (which the company can change at any time for any reason eg you can get to London for less than 20 quid on one journey but the one 30 minutes later on the same route and same train will be 2 or 3 times more expensive). There is more than enough monies in the reserves to give a proper pay rise to the striking workers, he's basically just saying "I want the money to go to the dozens of shareholders who don't even need it, rather than the 1000s of workers who do".
    Plus being a Shareholder isn't a guaranteed income provider. It's a gamble like anything else. One year your shares can be worth 50 percent more the next year they could be 75 percent less. That's the risk you enter into willingly! Workers have contracts that are meant to be legally binding and have consistent salaries. Not on a month-by-month basis where they might get more money one month and less money the next. They consistently worked the same hours those 2 months.
    It's all just rich people wanting constant protection against any fluctuation no matter what even if it means screwing over workers!

  • @SI-vb7hd
    @SI-vb7hd Před rokem +6

    The guy on the right talks a whole lot of nonsense

  • @567saturn
    @567saturn Před 8 měsíci +1

    In summary, his rationale for not confronting the corrupt system boiled down to the belief that engaging in a battle against it would be futile, given its inherent state of corruption.

  • @Mashedpotatoe1000
    @Mashedpotatoe1000 Před rokem +3

    It’s going to increase inflation when you increase worker wages but it won’t when you fill the pockets of directors of large corps. They filter expert advice as and when required.

  • @michaelrch
    @michaelrch Před rokem +6

    Grace is mostly right about the structure of the economy as prices rise. What she says about income and profits is correct.
    What she doesn't get mention is that inflation erodes savings and debt. That is generally bad for the "haves" and good for the "have nots". The exceptions are that the very rich own assets which inflate with inflation and the very poor cannot even get loans so they don't have debts to be eroded.

    • @frankdunne2401
      @frankdunne2401 Před rokem +1

      But the very poor still have debt, which increases with inflation.where did you do economics.

  • @Ian_Carolan
    @Ian_Carolan Před rokem +3

    Great content as always.

  • @bryansmith1404
    @bryansmith1404 Před rokem +1

    Where’s Grace been hiding, not seen much of her since 2019. Missed her.

    • @jaydee3216
      @jaydee3216 Před rokem +1

      Same. Missed her a lot. Great to see her here isn't it?

  • @1972hermanoben
    @1972hermanoben Před rokem +2

    It’s a moral question, as much as an economic one: should those who take the investment risk, staking their capital, expect to sustain losses as well as profits - if you want the gain, should you be prepared to handle the pain?

  • @dondoodat
    @dondoodat Před rokem +4

    "If you have a greater need, I'll just have greater greed."
    That guy can't even keep a straight face while he gaslights everyone.

  • @grahamturner1290
    @grahamturner1290 Před rokem +4

    The worship of greed on full display by the big money apologist.

  • @jenifernaidoo7231
    @jenifernaidoo7231 Před rokem +2

    So now profits should be guaranteed

  • @lukeparry6567
    @lukeparry6567 Před rokem

    How dare he say why we’re angry

  • @johngurvan8279
    @johngurvan8279 Před rokem +1

    The tories must think and hope we are all stupid. You know when price don't fall who has shares in that sector.

  • @richardstables4009
    @richardstables4009 Před rokem +1

    BUT THE MP'S GOT A MASSIVE PAY RISE.............

  • @matthewhenwood1009
    @matthewhenwood1009 Před rokem +2

    This would have been more worthwhile with just Christo and Grace. Grace was trying to make the counter point about that if companies can put prices up at a whim it's a sign capitalism isn't functioning properly because there isn't adequate competition in the industry (the railway being used as an example here) but everyone was talking over eachother and there wasn't enough time for each person to speak. For a robust argument it's also important to allow people who you don't agree with to finish making their point.

    • @jgmediting7770
      @jgmediting7770 Před rokem

      It wasn’t people disagreeing. There was only one good faith argument in the best interests of society and one propagandistic shill-like one in the best interests of a minority.

  • @phily8716
    @phily8716 Před rokem +2

    Cap profits. You can only make x amount more than the lowest paid worker. You don't get to make millions per year and cry poverty when the people who made you those millions want their fair share.
    This isn't a debate. One side wants everything and the other wants enough to live.

  • @MrBarrypwood
    @MrBarrypwood Před rokem +5

    this is the time to emigrate don't be the one left to turn the lights off ,little england is fucked get out whilst you can I went and its the best thing I have ever did

    • @jake751
      @jake751 Před rokem +1

      Totally agree with you England is now the money laundering country for the likes of Ukraine/America and not long ago Russia. Anyone young and has a skill should leave and go to prosperity in countries like new Zealand who are not corrupt and offer hope for families to live a good life.

  • @BWAProject
    @BWAProject Před rokem +1

    "Stealth Redistribution" is spot on. Except nobody dared to mention the real source of it - modern monetary policy.
    Central banks around the world have added $30trn to the m2 money supply via quantative easing (QE). This is the very definition of inflation outside of keynesian supply and demand/velocity of money effects; more dollars chasing after the same number of things means those things cost more money. Call it devaluation of purchasing power of your currency if you will, but either way, your money gets you less over time.
    We have actively chosen QE as a policy, so in large part, this inflation is manufactured. The best part is, all that printed money (which is a public liability we will all have to pay back) has basically gone into propping up asset classes which the majority of normal folks don't own e.g. equities + hard assets like property and commodities. So rich people and corps directly benefit from printing, then poor people disproportionately pay for it all through inflation and increased taxes. This is quite literally transferring money from the poor to the rich - almost like we are directly handing them $$$'s.
    This is the true crime going on around the world right now. It is plunging normal folks into debts they haven't even agreed to, all while improverishing them via increased prices and devaluation of earnings. The only way you can combat this is by participating in the the asset bubbles created, or you suffer worsened conditions without an appropriate offset.
    Once the markets have corrected over the next 2 years, buy stocks. It's the only way to properly insure yourself.

  • @silverfortytwo9506
    @silverfortytwo9506 Před rokem

    "Those are things from previously" - this genius

  • @mintywebb
    @mintywebb Před rokem +1

    Yet he will happily bring Britain to a standstill because some old woman died...

  • @silverfox--08
    @silverfox--08 Před rokem

    Grace Blakely is very intellectually clued up in everything she talks about. Gorgeous as well may I say

  • @thepm3972
    @thepm3972 Před rokem +2

    Focus on people not profit. Nobody should have more money they can spend in A Lifetime. whilst a food bank is open. Come on people wake up

  • @PKSiAMiAM
    @PKSiAMiAM Před rokem

    Not every business can afford to give staff a pay rise. I run a charity, I am responsible for everything that happens in my charity. I have a few staff lowest paid being on £10.50/hr. I am paid £13.30/hr. If the suggested £15/hr. Is implemented, my charity will close down. The impact of this will be huge, kids who are vulnerable to exploitation will have no safe space, people will be unemployed, community support offered which will disappear will put the poorest in the community into further economic difficulty. Whilst I would love a pay rise to help, we have to realise just putting wages up doesn't help. It makes things worse. We need to squeeze to the big companies to help smaller businesses start and grow to create competition which will drive down costs.

  • @DRDR3ADSA
    @DRDR3ADSA Před rokem

    ENLIGHTENED CENTRISM

  • @apedanticpeasant1447
    @apedanticpeasant1447 Před rokem +1

    Wow. Naked greed. Reduce profits or tax them properly and legislate so that a company gets taxed on the revenue from sales in the country regardless of where they are registered. Put in a maximum amount that any executive can be paid as a locked multiple of the lowest paid worker, including subcontractors.

  • @raymondellis9955
    @raymondellis9955 Před rokem

    What's not helpful is this government is taking everything away from the work class

  • @grumpy-dad3701
    @grumpy-dad3701 Před rokem +1

    Yes maybe companies won't pay out of profits. But there needs to be a change.
    Not everything should be about profit driven

  • @mr.mrs.d.7015
    @mr.mrs.d.7015 Před rokem

    Let him finish a damned sentence!

  • @paulsudbury7473
    @paulsudbury7473 Před rokem

    Thanks

  • @avoidconfusion
    @avoidconfusion Před rokem +4

    Cristo Foufas is a bit dim isn't he?

  • @MikeStock88
    @MikeStock88 Před rokem

    Why is it such an issue for companies not to make as high profits in a crisis, think about long term not short term

  • @LeonTrotsky6782
    @LeonTrotsky6782 Před rokem +15

    Please report spam. Especially investment advice, it is parasitic, annoying & misleading.

    • @henrymitchell6813
      @henrymitchell6813 Před rokem +2

      Completely agree

    • @DomFurlong
      @DomFurlong Před rokem

      @Ben Avery Not in their interests, put simply.

    • @joetrent4753
      @joetrent4753 Před rokem +2

      As far as I can tell, reporting spam on CZcams does nothing. I've reported plenty of spam before but it just gets reinstated and never deleted.

  • @brickshitenhauser4746

    you’d think they’d see the pain/suffering the cost is causing,and give back without being asked

  • @paweb3530
    @paweb3530 Před rokem

    About companies, their profits, and wages I will give an example of two big logistic companies:
    Company one - during tawn hall meetings CEO speaks about profit which increased every year during pandemic and it was a significant increase (more than expected), at the last town hall meeting even mention that company adjusted their prices accordingly to inflation level. With the inflation level of 10% they offered employees les thatn 8% pay rise at the end as the final offer. Same comapany announced it will buy off the sheres because is doing so well. Another change they make is to reduce employees contracts across the company from 40 hours to 37,5 per week (unpaid break) for every new employee and during every pay negotiation they try to change work terms & conditions (i.e. reduce sick pay or canceling additional breaks) calling that self funding pay rise.
    Company two - similar situation, rise in the profit at the level of company one, no pay rise offer for employees (there is no trade union on site) - instead they tell people that to help them with rising energy prices they offer overtime which will let them earn extra money to pay their bills (basic pay in the company is national minimum wage).
    This what Cristo says sounds a little bit wrong. Both companies adjust they prices in relation to rising costs and inflation, which means their customers have to do the same with retail products, what we can see and feel every day in the shops. But they dont want to share their profit with employees. That means they maintain profit growth year after year without taking responsibility for the employess and their situation in the realy hard times, because company and share holders profit is more important. Basically employees wages are dropping year after year only because of inflation level when companies profit rise.

  • @musiqtee
    @musiqtee Před rokem +1

    Sorry, big bloke… Shareholders and employers took a calculated, voluntary risk - venture capital, right? Employees have no share in that. Period.

  • @paulwilson2651
    @paulwilson2651 Před rokem +1

    How gorgeous is Grace?

  • @totalvoid6234
    @totalvoid6234 Před rokem +1

    Why let that loudmouthed liar on in the first place?

  • @7ookee
    @7ookee Před rokem +1

    This guy thinks companies needs are more important than workers needs. This is a democracy. To operate here you must adhere to working practices, if you can't manage with less profit then take your business elsewhere. Slave wages will not be tolerated. Since they believes in market forces then workers wages are also part of the market forces equation that must be calculated to create a viable business. Pretending that wages must be low and people must live in poverty to create a viable business is a lie.

  • @JonahX-ui9tf
    @JonahX-ui9tf Před rokem

    The Bank of England, is not the government, it is a privately owned bank that the British tax payer borrows money from, it is situated within london, but in the city of London, the city of London is not part of the uk, they don’t have democracy, it governs itself, therefore it is not the government lending money to themselves. It’s is a private area that doesn’t pay tax, has its own governing model. Has its own laws and it does not follow any of the rules within the uk as it was designed by the elite to keep them elite. Unfortunately the lack of economic and business knowledge in the uk is why we all get treat like shit by the elite.
    And unfortunately like the brainwashed chap in the glasses is talking about, is that instilled control that society has over people if they dribble everywhere listening to lies through mainstream media, big tech, big pharma etc, people need to spend some time understanding the world we live in so that you can see the way things are is wholly unacceptable, there is no argument that the rich are getting richer, their is no argument that tax money, which is debt is extracted from the public and given to the elite, it happened during the pandemic, now it’s oil and gas, all ways to redistribute poor people money to the rich. That is capitalism in the uk, it is not about distribution of wealth to the residents of the uk, it hasn’t been since prior to world war 1

  • @krcalder
    @krcalder Před rokem +1

    What did the father of modern economics say?
    "But the rate of profit does not, like rent and wages, rise with the prosperity and fall with the declension of the society. On the contrary, it is naturally low in rich and high in poor countries, and it is always highest in the countries which are going fastest to ruin." Adam Smith, classical economist
    Exactly the opposite of today's thinking, what does he mean?
    When rates of profit are high, capitalism is cannibalising itself by:
    1) Not engaging in long term investment for the future
    2) Paying insufficient wages to maintain demand for its products and services
    Today’s problems with growth and demand.
    Amazon didn't suck its profits out as dividends and look how big it's grown (not so good on the wages).
    The benefits of the system can be passed upwards in dividends or downwards in wages.
    Both actually detract from the money available for re-investment as Jeff Bezos knows only too well.
    He didn’t pay dividends, and paid really low wages to maximise the amount that he could re-invest in Amazon and look how big it’s grown.
    The shareholders gains are made through the value of the shares.
    Jeff Bezos hopes other people are paying high enough wages to buy lots of stuff from Amazon; his own workers don’t have much purchasing power.

  • @royyborg2797
    @royyborg2797 Před rokem

    the shoulda asked bigfat christo if he's ever asked for more from the tenants hes landlords to.

  • @bazcambs451
    @bazcambs451 Před rokem

    Companies can just put up prices? What?

    • @jgmediting7770
      @jgmediting7770 Před rokem

      I guess he doesn’t realise he’s admitting the system is broken if companies have the concentrated market power to put up prices whenever they want, and the concentrated political power to continuously increase and keep their profits.

  • @jayjay-zb8zg
    @jayjay-zb8zg Před rokem +1

    when ur a hammer everything looks like a nail ....

  • @michie2510
    @michie2510 Před rokem

    The puffy looking chap in the glasses is suffering from The Dunning- Krueger effect. Close your eyes and he sounds like a shouty golf club bore.

  • @martinsmith8487
    @martinsmith8487 Před rokem +6

    Tell me Foufas how many days pay did you lose during pandemic whilst sat on your Brobdingnagian backside listening to others woes in the real world who actually ‘work’ ????

  • @brianparsons9368
    @brianparsons9368 Před rokem

    Profit is the problem. Water, gas, electricity and transport should not be for profit. It should be cost plus a reasonable margin for reinvestment.

  • @paulcrawford5437
    @paulcrawford5437 Před rokem

    It's not just prices that are going up the amount you buy is going down, I mean 2 weeks ago I bought flora 500g my last shop they were down to 450g for the same price in a stealth raising of prices.

    • @apedanticpeasant1447
      @apedanticpeasant1447 Před rokem

      I had to sell my ass in a dark alley for a 500g Lurpak. Gold is less expensive. 😳

  • @oldmuso586
    @oldmuso586 Před rokem

    Christo. From Talk TV. A News UK channel. Owned by Murdoch. 'Nuff said,.
    Someone also needs to point out to corporations that the higher they increase prices, the less workers on stagnant wages can afford. Eventually no one will afford their products. Fuel is a classic example.

  • @Scitzowicz
    @Scitzowicz Před rokem

    I wonder who’s paying the large fellow

  • @arghjayem
    @arghjayem Před rokem

    03:39 I love how there wasn’t a lot of reaction to Sam Bright’s suggestion of removing the tax statuses of a private schools in order to help fund state schools…..could it be because Sam is the only one in this panel that went to a state school? All the rest were privately educated. I’m amazed Grave Blakeley is so relatively left in her thinking considering her background is more akin to your average Tory/Prime Minister- went to a nice private school, then onto Oxford for university. As much as I like her position it’s a struggle taking someone from such a privileged background serious on matters like the cost of living, but I guess it’s only when it hits even the better off we are truly in the shit.
    Aside from Sam, this is a bunch of upper middle class idiots screaming at each other about issues that don’t really affect them. 🤔🤷🤨

  • @tommysteel2844
    @tommysteel2844 Před rokem +1

    What? Ask Companies to pay workers more from their profits!!? Yes, actually they wouldn't have the profits if it wasn't for the workers...sounds logical to me, except the clown on the end has already clutching his pearls..

  • @mattgoodman9830
    @mattgoodman9830 Před rokem

    The point is, if a company chases profits it creates opportunities for market entry. Competition will eventually erode profits; it's what is supposed to happen.

  • @ghuldeen
    @ghuldeen Před rokem

    Corporations raised rates far above inflation as an opportunity to gouge for extra profit, while passing none of it on to their employees. Their raises are responsible for 65% of inflation but nothing is being done about that and all this government keeps saying to workers is tighten your belt. There needs to be some sort of balance. My suggestion is moderate raised of say 4-5%, with a one time payment of an additional 4-5% to take care of shirt term pain until inflation comes down.