Showing posts with label Economics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Economics. Show all posts

Tuesday 29 July 2014

Clarkson 'must go' after racism ruling, Daily Express

Jeremy Clarkson, Clarkson, Clarkson racism, Clarkson racism ruling, Clarkson must go

Regulator Ofcom found the BBC breached the broadcasting code when Clarkson used a derogatory term for people of Asian descent in a Top Gear show filmed in Burma and screened in March.
Lawyers for complainant Somi Guha, an Asian-born actress, said Clarkson should be fired.
Lawrence Davies, of law firm Equal Justice, yesterday said: “When it comes to racism, Clarkson is a serial offender. He is already on a final written warning and must be immediately disciplined.”
Three months ago Clarkson was given a final warning by the BBC for apparently using the “n-word” in unaired Top Gear footage.
 Comment:
 Although we all know that Jeremy Clarkson and his fellow presenters, James May and Richard Hammond can say some stupid and ill-thought out  remakes, and due to unscrupulous lawyers and people who believe that they should receive compensation for “ perceived “  insults will always take advantage hoping for the big payout

Monday 28 July 2014

Menace of the new parking cowboys: Drivers 'fined' £100 for overstaying by minutes at fast food chains and shops , Daily Mail


Warning: A branch of McDonald¿s Drive-Thru with parking restrictions advertised at the entrance

  Tickets doled out  private firms do not have official legal status

  Many are in fact issued unfairly and without the proper legal authority

  AA president Edmund King says many use 'scare tactics and bullying' 

  Drivers cannot be compelled to pay unless a court order is granted 

‘Cowboy’ parking squads hired by High Street firms are hitting hundreds of thousands of drivers with £100 ‘fines’ and using threats to make them pay up.

The companies – employed by fast food chains, retailers and railway operators – issue what appear to be official penalty notices, similar to those used by council traffic wardens. They then extract huge sums from drivers who are sometimes just a few minutes late in returning to their cars.

However, the tickets do not have the same legal standing as official fines.

Many are being issued unfairly and – in some cases – without proper legal authority.





Sunday 27 July 2014

Scotland could run out of cash just like Greece, Scottish Sunday Express

scotland, independence, referendum, europe, austerity, great britain, england, greece, italy, alex salmond, oil, bank of england

S
cotland would need to severely downsize its financial sector in order to avoid a major economic crisis if the country votes to break away from the rest of Britain.

According to former Scottish Government economist Florian Baier and former Bank of England economist Erik Britton, an independent Scotland would be left over-reliant on its financial sector and North Sea oil.

The economists’ upcoming paper for Fathom Consulting estimates the country’s 
banking assets as potential liabilities would be 1,100 per cent of GDP, similar to the liabiities that caused an economic crisis in Iceland in which its government took over three of its largest banks in 2008.


In the week the economy returned to pre-crisis level... Why I, as an ex Labour Minister, think Ed Balls MUST apologise for the mess he left us in, writes DIGBY JONES Daily Mail

No joke: Ed Balls and his 'mocking flat-lining' hand signals on The Andrew Marr Show in December last year
Ed Balls
But last week’s economic figures weren’t some flash in the pan. Britain is back. A sustainable, deep, far-reaching recovery, not built on house price inflation, has arrived.

Inflation lower than Japan, unemployment lower than America, growth higher than Germany (and on Thursday it was even warmer in England than in Honolulu!). 

Take these facts:

·         The most productive car plant in Europe is the Nissan factory in Sunderland.

·         The Jaguar Land Rover plant in Liverpool has moved on to 24/7 working to cope with demand for its Range Rover Evoque from China, let alone everywhere else. They’re even building a new engine plant in Wolverhampton.

·         The Airbus put together in Toulouse has more British parts than French or German.

·         General Motors is actually closing a car plant in Bochum, Germany (the first such closure in that country since the Second World War) with 4,000 job losses, and expanding its plant at Ellesmere Port instead.

Construction, financial services, retail, manufacturing, creative industries, and the services sector are all going in the right direction. 


Ex-Labour Minister: Digby Jones is the former Minister of State for Trade and Investment
Digby Jones.


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