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UK AAA rating Downgrade

Discussion in 'Serious' started by Cozmo87, 24 Feb 2013.

  1. Cozmo87

    Cozmo87 "huh hurmm!!!"

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    Hi everyone just found out this morning that are Triple-A rating has been downgraded to AA1.
    What does this mean for our future.
    Do you think the government is biting the bullet To reduce Our debt significantly. Or could another government do better. Just wanted to know your thoughts and views.
     
  2. fdbh96

    fdbh96 What's a Dremel?

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    To be honest im not sure it was avoidable. Quite a lot of the other countries in the EU have had it too. The problem is that we need to cut spending, but we've got used to the way things were which isn't sustainable, so every time cuts of some kind are announced theres a big protest/strike.
     
  3. Kronos

    Kronos Multimodder

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    According to all the old speeches from George Osborne that have been aired since Moody's downgraded the U K's credit rating in which he insisted that it was essential that Britain kept it's triple A rating, all of a sudden it does not seem to matter that the rating has been changed.

    I do not profess to know about economics on a national scale and whereas I agree that cuts must be made I do not believe for one minute that we are all in this together. The poorest in our society seem to be bearing the brunt of the austerity measures whilst others life continues as if nothing has happened. Cuts are useful but without some sort of growth strategy then we will remain in these dire conditions for much longer than needed.

    As to the rating change it has not affected the USA or France so hopefully the downgrade will have a minimal affect on the UK.
     
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  4. JoshH

    JoshH What's a Dremel?

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    The problem I can see it causing is people reluctance to invest yet again
     
  5. rollo

    rollo Modder

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    Does not make a great deal of difference.

    Borrowing rates will go down if a similar thing happens to what happened to america and france. Enough they can not get alot lower. George Osborne just wanted a political promise to keep and now its gone he has failed.

    Ill be happy to see the back of George Osborne his cuts hit the poorest and leave the wealthy untouched. ( hell i got a tax deduction lol) Seen friends on the lower wage scales really been hit hard by his brutal stance on Child tax credits among other things.

    This has been on the cards for months now, This has already been calculated in most share prices as a guarentee after the uk entered its second negative growth.

    People were not investing before when they had the AAA rating what makes you think they will be more reluctant now when they already were not doing it in the first place.

    We have rentered a second recession due to lack of growth caused by lack of investment.
     
  6. Harlequin

    Harlequin Modder

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    alot less attention is given to S&P , moody`s and fitch now than before 2008 - alot of `noise` was made that those 3 `credit agencies` were paid off to keep the toxic banks looking good , when in fact it was widely known they should have failed allready.

    the EU is allready taking steps away from the USA credit agencies , and china allready has.
     
  7. mucgoo

    mucgoo Minimodder

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    I think he meant the UK needed to be able to borrow at comparable rates to the US and Germany. Pre 2008 an AAA rating was the guarantee of that and it made for an easy sound bite. Not so much now.
     
  8. sniperdude

    sniperdude Minimodder

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    It's no surprise.

    The conservatives under David Cameron seem to be the most incompetent party in my life time at least.

    U turns.
    Broken promises.
    People seeing huge drop in living standards.
    Disabled people and people on benefits branded as scum
    Bedroom tax for the poorest while richest get tax cuts for living in huge houses.
     
  9. mucgoo

    mucgoo Minimodder

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    They inherited the worst recession since the great depression. Not a single western country has avoided a decline in living standards.
    And I don't recall any branding as scum of any group.
    Its not a bedroom tax rather a charge for couple who's children have left who are enjoying living in government subsidized three or four bedroom houses. Seems perfectly reasonable. If it was being levied on owner-occupiers who had spare room in some move to lower house price (I wish) then it would be a tax.

    I agree on the first two.
     
  10. sniperdude

    sniperdude Minimodder

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    Call it a tax or a charge it still amounts to the same thing (people who don't have it OR have any other place to go have to pay)

    And it don't just effect people people in three of four bedroom council properties and its not just for "couples who's children have left who are enjoying living in government subsidized homes.

    You have to realise that for years their has been a shortage of these houses and flats,
    Councils have been giving single people 2 bed room properties because they just don't have 1 bed properties to give (still the case even now and yes these people have to pay)

    Same as the single dad or mum who has the kids of a weekend so needs the room/rooms.

    This also includes people who were given accommodation under a medical award stating the amount of bedrooms they need ( in other words the only properties they could ever be offered could now classed as under occupied)


    Government says this "Tax" will save 500m a year

    But how?

    They force a single person (evict because of being in arrears) out of a 2 bed costing £65 a week into a private place were he/she can claim £85 a week, how does that save money?


    The only way the government will save any money is if people refuse to leave and what choice do they have if their is no other place to go.
     
  11. YEHBABY

    YEHBABY RIP Tel

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    If I hear that Tory mantra 'inherited' anymore I will scream. At some point they have to take responsibility for their actions. They have taken a lot of decisions over the past 2.5 years, when there were other options.

    For me one of Osborne's biggest mistakes is to constantly talk down the economy and state "the mess we inherited, it's worse than we thought". All the negative soundbites put investors off investing and consumers think twice before they purchase big items.

    The other is not be willing to change course, because it will be seen as politically weak. It just means the country suffers so that he can keep chanting his mantra.
     
  12. mucgoo

    mucgoo Minimodder

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    The lack of smaller housing units is a flaw with the policy yes. Shouldn't take long to subdivide some houses up. The idea that you can expect a subsidized lifetime tenancy in a larger than needed house is lunacy.

    2.5 years isn't very long on an economic time-scale. Gordon Brown didn't make any progress in finding a solution in his 2.5 years either. No western country (with the exception of Australia's resource fuelled growth) has found a way to growth. I don't quite see what they could of done differently. Spending your way out requires a sufficiently small debt going into a recessionary period for the market to let you borrow heavily as you try and return to growth. The same applies for consumer helping to spend the country out of recession. Households can't borrow more when they're already heavily leveraged as they were in 2007.
     
  13. YEHBABY

    YEHBABY RIP Tel

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    They have made a lot of decisions over the last 2.5 years that will affect the country for many years to come. The economic forecasts are made many years into the future and look very grim indeed. The worst thing is when we compare earlier forecasts with the current they all turn out to be optimistic.

    What people don't realise is that we haven't seen the worst of it yet. The cuts will really start to bite over the next 2 years.
     
  14. mucgoo

    mucgoo Minimodder

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    They look more pessimistic for the entire globe not just the UK.

    The alternative is what? Borrow and spend and hope the markets doesn't start hiking up interest rates to much. You could find many economic PHD's advocating either side. Dismissing the governments handling as incompetent isn't a fair judgement.
     
  15. sniperdude

    sniperdude Minimodder

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    Are you trolling?

    They are never going to subdivide up houses for the simple fact if they have a 3 bed room place vacant their is a line a mile long with family's trying to move into it

    It would cost too much and the government don't even own most of the housing stock
    its owned by housing associations that the government have little or no power over and they are just as annoyed with the tax as the tenants.


    BTW
    "The idea that you can expect a subsidized lifetime tenancy in a larger than needed house is lunacy. "

    Pensioners are exempt from this Bedroom Tax a single old lady/man will be rattling round 2/3/4 bed houses with no issues after their family's have long flew the nest.
     
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  16. YEHBABY

    YEHBABY RIP Tel

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    Why can't I call them incompetent. They are the ones in control with the ability to make choices. Like you said "You could find many economic PHD's advocating either side." I believe they took the wrong choices and worse still continue to make the same wrong choices purely because of political pride.

    The reason pensioners are excluded is that a high proportion of them vote.

    Oh wait, did the rest of the world overspend on their public services and cause a recession, as well? That's the reason this country is in recession according to this government.:rolleyes:
     
    Last edited by a moderator: 25 Feb 2013
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  17. sniperdude

    sniperdude Minimodder

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    Makes sense.

    You can be sure a lot more people will be voting next time.
     
  18. Harlequin

    Harlequin Modder

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    india has a 5% gdp growth - and we`re still giving them `aid` yeah work that out sam with pakistan having 3.7% growth and still aid as well



    georgia 6% , gibralter 6% ,norway has 3.1% , iceland 2.7 ,poland 2.1 , sweden 1.9 , germany 0.9 swizz 0.8

    a small number of countries (out of many) still with positive growth.
     
  19. mucgoo

    mucgoo Minimodder

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    Surely its a good thing if you force a couple to vacate a large house so instead a family can be housed, the purpose of the measure.
    The general lack of affordable housing really does need tackling.
    Social housing isn't an area I'm too fond of.
    The pensioner exemption is as has been discussed pandering to the electorate for votes.

    Well yes. Its not just governments of course.
    [​IMG]
    You see a similar picture for most western countries.
    The original shock which started this all of was the collapse of the highly leveraged US housing market.
     
  20. sniperdude

    sniperdude Minimodder

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    however aid to India is finished by 2015 but they no longer want or need the aid so it should have been pulled right away.

    this is an interesting read tho
    http://uk.news.yahoo.com/uk-to-end-...-receive-most-cash-from-britain-09112012.html
     

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