UK trains set to resume fleecing passengers after storm disruption
Pride’s Purge raises the solution to the private-sector rip-offs affecting many of our services, including (here) the railways: Re-nationalise.
That goes for electricity, gas, water, and all the others that have gone into private (and many of them foreign) hands since the early 1980s.
2 thoughts on “UK trains set to resume fleecing passengers after storm disruption”
Big Bill
And, indeed, the creation of money into the economy, which has been entirely in private hands since this was agreed to in the Maastricht/Lisbon set of treaties. The BofE can still create money and so can the Treasury but not, sayeth the treaties, directly into the economy. Hence, when the BofE performed what it chose to refer to as QE recently, it simply expanded the commercial banks’ reserves at the BofE by swapping newly-created money for bond assets. This meant the commerical banks had more in their reserves to play wth so in theory they could have ‘loaned’ ie created. more money into the economy. In the event they chose not to so it never reached the broader economy, although we still felt some inflationary effects in the shape of higher prices. When we complain about the privatised utilities, let’s not forget money; it’s the most important one.
The people are far more left wing than weak knee Labour and show a clear
majority for public ownership of the utilities and rail.
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And, indeed, the creation of money into the economy, which has been entirely in private hands since this was agreed to in the Maastricht/Lisbon set of treaties. The BofE can still create money and so can the Treasury but not, sayeth the treaties, directly into the economy. Hence, when the BofE performed what it chose to refer to as QE recently, it simply expanded the commercial banks’ reserves at the BofE by swapping newly-created money for bond assets. This meant the commerical banks had more in their reserves to play wth so in theory they could have ‘loaned’ ie created. more money into the economy. In the event they chose not to so it never reached the broader economy, although we still felt some inflationary effects in the shape of higher prices. When we complain about the privatised utilities, let’s not forget money; it’s the most important one.
The people are far more left wing than weak knee Labour and show a clear
majority for public ownership of the utilities and rail.