Tubby Isaacs wrote: ↑Thu Jul 17, 2025 9:23 pm I see Richard Murphy has already predicted a crash before Reeves has published detailed proposals. He’ll have a lot more engagement than Nils Pratley. There’s really no incentive to do any proper work if you’re a commentator these daysA pioneer is another accountant Terry Smith who somehow managed to set himself up as a pundit on the Eurozone PIIGS crisis around 2010. He would turn up on Newsnight predicting unsubstantiated horse shit about the Eurozone's fate while the presenter looked sagely at Terry.
Youngian wrote: ↑Fri Jul 18, 2025 1:40 pmHe's a fund manager, but I was wondering where his profile had come from.
A pioneer is another accountant Terry Smith who somehow managed to set himself up as a pundit on the Eurozone PIIGS crisis around 2010. He would turn up on Newsnight predicting unsubstantiated horse shit about the Eurozone's fate while the presenter looked sagely at Terry.
There is simply no source of additional money to spend to stimulate growth. The bond markets have had enough of governments who continually run unsustainable deficits. You cannot borrow your way out of a debt crisis.In the month he published this, UK 10 year bonds were 1.69%.
The Bill remains a step in the right direction towards getting Britain building again.
Replacing the broken status quo of site by site protections that delivered bat tunnels and fish discos with a more strategic approach to environmental recovery through Environmental Delivery Plans (EDPs) is a good thing. It is reassuring that they remain part of the bill.
*However* even before these amendments there was a risk that EDPs would be hard to implement. The new amendments will make EDPs harder, slower, and more expensive to prepare. Opportunities for legal challenge will increase. More often than not infrastructure projects won't be covered and will have to fall back on an unreformed status quo.
With Natural England in charge of delivery without direct ministerial oversight, I remain concerned that the Bill will fail to consign the bat tunnels and fish discos to history.
The Bill should have been a watershed moment for unleashing growth across Britain, but these amendments widen the cracks in the central pillar of the Government’s growth strategy.
The Weeping Angel wrote: ↑Fri Jul 18, 2025 3:50 pm Not looking good on planning.I wouldn't worry too much about that. It was always going to get amended.