Re: Jobless Rate: The Truth Bubble?
Thank you Raz for taking the discussion around and back to my earlier comment.
I have come to the same conclusion as Sharky's that I highlight above; but have to add, that in today's economic climate, the question is - has anyone involved with regulation any incentive at all to set that into motion? My interest is very real as I am getting very significant support from The Times, here in London, with regard to my ongoing campaign to introduce the idea of creating a new savings institution I call The capital Spillway Trust. By chance, it would seem I am a direct competitor of NEST, a new system being set up to take savings from the lower paid. NEST is in the process of spending nigh on £50 million and I have spent less than £1,000. They are being set up to take the savings, (less a 2% management fee to repay the set up costs), and to transfer the savings into Government Gilts, and thus to give to the government to spend, while I am aiming to take the savings of the people and reinvest the savings, as free enterprise equity capital, back into the local savers communities.
From The Times Wednesday March 17, 2010
Low earners to lose chunk of pension savings from word go
Experts say that Nest could be an expensive way of saving for some and that many will be deterred by upfront charges
Patrick Hosking, Financial Editor
http://business.timesonline.co.uk/to...cle7064689.ece
scroll down the page to read my own comments.
Also see this comment same day: http://business.timesonline.co.uk/to...cle7064717.ece
And yesterday, they let me place the first page of The Capital Spillway Trust Proposal up as a comment: http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/com...cle7066162.ece
But the underlying point is that, while The Capital Spillway Trust, (I must add that I have given the whole concept to the people and anyone, from any nation may create their own "Local" Capital Spillway Trust fund to invest under the rules I have already set out), is a direct competitor to NEST, indeed, any existing savings institution; I do wonder if the concept will be permitted to continue as the regulations for taking in savings into funds is closely regulated and immensely complex.
The point being that the involvement of government is driven by the businesses that feed off the present FIRE economy. They both feed off each other. So you cannot separate government from business because they are both in the same game. The game being suppression of competition. On one side, to keep the government grant system in place that employs so many public servants and on the other hand to keep the borrowing by government in place as the FIRE economy has a very considerable vested interest in what is the same thing. To keep all that in place has required very complex rules, on the same theme of fear as terrorism laws, using fear, this time of loss of savings, to prevent competition from any outside influence, such as a new way to use savings.
Originally posted by Sharky
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Thank you Raz for taking the discussion around and back to my earlier comment.
I have come to the same conclusion as Sharky's that I highlight above; but have to add, that in today's economic climate, the question is - has anyone involved with regulation any incentive at all to set that into motion? My interest is very real as I am getting very significant support from The Times, here in London, with regard to my ongoing campaign to introduce the idea of creating a new savings institution I call The capital Spillway Trust. By chance, it would seem I am a direct competitor of NEST, a new system being set up to take savings from the lower paid. NEST is in the process of spending nigh on £50 million and I have spent less than £1,000. They are being set up to take the savings, (less a 2% management fee to repay the set up costs), and to transfer the savings into Government Gilts, and thus to give to the government to spend, while I am aiming to take the savings of the people and reinvest the savings, as free enterprise equity capital, back into the local savers communities.
From The Times Wednesday March 17, 2010
Low earners to lose chunk of pension savings from word go
Experts say that Nest could be an expensive way of saving for some and that many will be deterred by upfront charges
Patrick Hosking, Financial Editor
http://business.timesonline.co.uk/to...cle7064689.ece
scroll down the page to read my own comments.
Also see this comment same day: http://business.timesonline.co.uk/to...cle7064717.ece
And yesterday, they let me place the first page of The Capital Spillway Trust Proposal up as a comment: http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/com...cle7066162.ece
But the underlying point is that, while The Capital Spillway Trust, (I must add that I have given the whole concept to the people and anyone, from any nation may create their own "Local" Capital Spillway Trust fund to invest under the rules I have already set out), is a direct competitor to NEST, indeed, any existing savings institution; I do wonder if the concept will be permitted to continue as the regulations for taking in savings into funds is closely regulated and immensely complex.
The point being that the involvement of government is driven by the businesses that feed off the present FIRE economy. They both feed off each other. So you cannot separate government from business because they are both in the same game. The game being suppression of competition. On one side, to keep the government grant system in place that employs so many public servants and on the other hand to keep the borrowing by government in place as the FIRE economy has a very considerable vested interest in what is the same thing. To keep all that in place has required very complex rules, on the same theme of fear as terrorism laws, using fear, this time of loss of savings, to prevent competition from any outside influence, such as a new way to use savings.
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