Wednesday, 20 January 2010

Good, good, news!

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/8469648.stm


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Monday, 18 January 2010

Was indepence worth 21.6 billion dollars?

The history of Haiti is interesting and a fact I discovered today is 
mind blowing when you consider the disaster and the costs of sending 
aid.

Haiti, a French colony, was only granted independence as long as the 
new country recompensed their colonial masters for the loss of 
plantations and slaves.

It took them over a hundred years to achieve and the value of what 
they repaid (which included the interest, natch) was, at 2004 prices, 
$21,685,135,571.

And for the record - the cruise ships >>should<< have operated 
normally (as per their contract) and arrived at the island. Haiti has 
suffered a terrible tragedy - don't wish their economy away as well 
out of some petty left-wing sense of envy-politics.

SH

Social Mobility takes centre stage

My god Ed Balls is getting better - a fine interview on the Politics Show yesterday, when he got onto the topic of today's social mobility announcements.

It's a very welcome development that Gordon Brown and Alan Milburn can come together to discuss this topic, because I think Milburn's research last year, went a long way to describing the problem of how quality well paid jobs are increasingly being filled by those from privileged backgrounds, and the more typical working class weren't working their way into them.

On this, I think Ed Balls missed the trick against Suchet.  Suchet's point was that Social Mobility has hardly moved after 13 years of a Labour Government.

But in truth, these things take generations before you even know if you are making progress.

To be able to measure whether more working class people are successful lawyers, requires at least 4-6 years while they go through education (and only because Labour have put half of all 18 year olds into uni at all) and then we have to watch them struggle through early years of work.

Aspiration is, of course, still a huge issue about whether an individual decides to apply themselves to making it in the professions, and we still have work to do on that level and with mentors.

But it did occur to me that David Cameron's claim to be 'brazenly elitist' in his new plans for teachers, will encourage more upper class kids to become teachers, opening up opportunity in the other professions.

No, I don't believe it will happen either…

SH


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Why this isn't 1997 - part 115.3

Gordon Brown's activities today are putting election attention (Elention? Attection? Anyone?) on the middle classes.

Meanwhile in the blogosphere, there have been a number of right-wing bloggers attacking trade unions, and their raison d'ĂȘtre.

The right-wing argument goes that we don't live in a world of mass workplace exploitation anymore, because we are zipping along in our own self-employed consultant flexible-working paradises (Paradisii?).

In many ways they might be right.  There are trends for future working patterns which will lead people to be much more in control over their own destiny and able to make choices about working patters etc. (much introduced as legislation by this labour government), and they are also right that higher-level skills has also led to improvements.

However, let's not be ignorant of the fact that a great deal of people still work in situations where they are being exploited.  The need for Trade Unions is still great in this modern age as in those before it. 

And yet the modern Conservative will bang away instead at the need to tear them down because it is inconceivable to him that there could be any other answer else - "you mean the private sector, can be 'gasp' nasty to people??!?"

Cameron's Conservatives are one-view people.  In 1997 Tony Blair and Gordon, and the New Labour project took seriously the importance of looking through the prism to identify the myriad different lives that Britain lives.

Cameron doesn't do that - and on election day his lack of total support will reflect that.

SH


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Wednesday, 6 January 2010

Think Politics Doesn't Affect You?

I only wish that last night the hundreds of cars that I was stuck with crawling into Liverpool with all understood that politics failed them last night.

Sometimes we have to appreciate that politics isn't about high falluting ideas and principles.

Sometimes it's about whether we have enough grit. Salt mined in Cheshire and transported 15 miles away to Liverpool.

And last night that didn't happen. Everybody in every pub, in every newsagent knows that Liverpool City Council, through incompetence, ran out of grit yesterday.

We should do well to remember that voters expect services to be well run - and they'll punish those that can't. Just like they'll punish the Lib Dems later this year.

SH