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The Credit Cruncher was conceived to help you to keep up to date with credit crunch and recession developments, it provides some helpful credit crunch advice and it addresses personal debt. The Credit Cruncher also seeks to explain how the credit crunch started and shed some light on the worldwide recession. Recently, we have begun to look at how BREXIT will affect the UK economy. Please feel free to leave comments where relevant.
12 May 2010
A Con-Lib Alliance is is then...probably
With fine details yet to be thrashed out, a Conservative - Liberal Coalition is undoubtedly going to be the UK's next government. Gordon Brown resigned (again) yesterday after saying he would resign in September anyway. I must say I feel a little sorry for Gordon as I feel that his resignation yesterday was his own decision, the one the day before was I am sure foisted on him as a last-ditch attempt at attracting the Liberals. No doubt a scheme dreamt up by arch-idiots Mandy and Campbell.. Only a few days ago, Campbell was trying to claim that Gordon had the 'perfect right to be Prime Minister'. Only the great unelected (Such as Mandy & Campbell) could believe a man twice unlected could legitimately hold the right to an elected position. At least that should be the last we see of them in the corridors of power for a while (unless you include the House of Lords of course).
I have long believed that the House of Lords holds a valuable place in UK politics, and that's probably because I don't have the great faith in 'Democracy' that the majority seem to have. However, since they put Mandy in there (what to do with a man you have sacked, reinstated and sacked again?... make him a Lord!!), I am that much more in favour of it's abolition.
So what does the future hold for the UK? Presuming that the EEC survives the growing economic volcano, it will be a period of cuts and protest, Cameron has acknowledged this right at the start. The real trouble starts if we are plunged into a second recession in the EEC bankruptcy fallout. If Greece and other teetering nations cannot be bailed out, there is no knowing what will happen. Looking at this purely politically, the labour party did not lose as many seats as they might have, and the liberals did not gain as many seats as they might have, so the door is still open for a reversal of fortunes if the coalition does not deliver what the electorate want. Economically, we are in for a tough time and that could also unsettle the electorate especially when the government clashes with the unions as it will inevitably do. The unions would do well to bear in mind that we are in the midst of hard times. The attitude of 'Unite' over the British Airways dispute is not likley to draw much sympathy. True, some privileges have been withdrawn, but in the light of dwindling revenue in the travel industry particularly, further pressure by the unions is unwelcome and unwarranted. Public service unions are going to clash with the goverment over cuts in services, but at the end of the day, we have to get the national debt back on to a manageable footing before we build up public services again. This next two or three-year period is not the time to cry over losing your increments and priveleges if you have managed to retain your job. Pay will be down, revenues will be down, employees that can't accept that, and still feel that their pay must be comparable with someone else's, run the risk of comparing someone else's pay with their dole money...
There is still a very real danger that this coalition may prove unsustainable when real pressure is applied, we wait to see what will happen.
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