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Do you want to discuss boring politics? (27 Viewers)

  • Thread starter mrtrench
  • Start date Jun 14, 2020
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shmmeee

Well-Known Member
  • Jan 27, 2023
  • #25,691
CCFCSteve said:
It’s a public sector project. Of course private sector is going to deliver it as you can’t just employ tens of thousands of random people to deliver a massive project but there has been no control of spending from the top

‘High Speed Two (HS2) Limited is the company responsible for developing and promoting the UK's new high speed rail network. It is funded by grant-in-aid from the government. HS2 Ltd is an executive non-departmental public body, sponsored by the Department for Transport’

ps we also live in a country where everything is painfully slow to deliver
Click to expand...

Have you ever worked in private industry? That happens all the time.
 

skybluetony176

Well-Known Member
  • Jan 27, 2023
  • #25,692
fernandopartridge said:
No, the government creates gilts to give institutions like pension funds long term safe investments (bonds), this is a choice it makes which has some merit. It does not need to borrow £ from anybody, it can create a £ at the strike of a key in the Bank of England.
Click to expand...
So like I said then, they’re borrowing the money.
 

fernandopartridge

Well-Known Member
  • Jan 27, 2023
  • #25,693
skybluetony176 said:
So like I said then, they’re borrowing the money.
Click to expand...

No. They are not. They are selling a financial product. Borrowing the money implies that the spending is dependent on somebody investing in the bond, it is not.
 

chiefdave

Well-Known Member
  • Jan 27, 2023
  • #25,694
The capacity agreement only works if people are prepared to use alternative routes. There's an existing cheaper, and slower, route from Cov to London. You don't get much overcrowding on that one as the vast majority of people use the quickest route.

Are they going to come up with some ridiculous pricing structure to force people onto certain trains?

can't help think putting this much money into improving existing infrastructure and running better and more frequestnt services would have been a better option
 

robbiekeane

Well-Known Member
  • Jan 27, 2023
  • #25,695
fernandopartridge said:
No. They are not. They are selling a financial product. Borrowing the money implies that the spending is dependent on somebody investing in the bond, it is not.
Click to expand...
Government borrowing as a term includes issuing debt securities like bonds. Selling a financial product = borrowing….surely you’re not disputing that
 
Reactions: skybluetony176

fernandopartridge

Well-Known Member
  • Jan 27, 2023
  • #25,696
CCFCSteve said:
It’s a public sector project. Of course private sector is going to deliver it as you can’t just employ tens of thousands of random people to deliver a massive project but there has been no control of spending from the top

‘High Speed Two (HS2) Limited is the company responsible for developing and promoting the UK's new high speed rail network. It is funded by grant-in-aid from the government. HS2 Ltd is an executive non-departmental public body, sponsored by the Department for Transport’

ps we also live in a country where everything is painfully slow to deliver
Click to expand...

Do you think the grant-in-aid is open ended?

High Speed Two 6-monthly report to Parliament: October 2022

Review of HS2 including programme update, local community impact and engagement, environment, benefits and programme governance.
www.gov.uk

There is a budget like anything else. Its last published accounts stated that it delivered what it had intended to broadly within the budget for the year.

It's a myth that the private sector perfectly manages budgets, the only reason that perception exists is because it does not have to report so publicly like the public sector does. Everybody is subject to the same cost pressures.
 

fernandopartridge

Well-Known Member
  • Jan 27, 2023
  • #25,697
robbiekeane said:
Government borrowing as a term includes issuing debt securities like bonds. Selling a financial product = borrowing….surely you’re not disputing that
Click to expand...

I am not disputing it I am saying that the borrowing is not an actual dependency for spending. The labelling of selling securities as borrowing misrepresents what it happening as the general public assume it to be like you or I going to the bank to borrow money.
 
D

Deleted member 5849

Guest
  • Jan 27, 2023
  • #25,698
fernandopartridge said:
Because that was never the argument for it, the argument is that it increases capacity on the other lines to allow more local trains
Click to expand...
It doesn't increase capacity if the lines aren't happening to the places they were going to!
 
Reactions: skybluetony176

skybluetony176

Well-Known Member
  • Jan 27, 2023
  • #25,699
fernandopartridge said:
No. They are not. They are selling a financial product. Borrowing the money implies that the spending is dependent on somebody investing in the bond, it is not.
Click to expand...
Not sure you understand how bonds work.
 

skybluetony176

Well-Known Member
  • Jan 27, 2023
  • #25,700
fernandopartridge said:
I am not disputing it I am saying that the borrowing is not an actual dependency for spending. The labelling of selling securities as borrowing misrepresents what it happening as the general public assume it to be like you or I going to the bank to borrow money.
Click to expand...
So like I said then. They’re borrowing it.
 

fernandopartridge

Well-Known Member
  • Jan 27, 2023
  • #25,701
skybluetony176 said:
Not sure you understand how bonds work.
Click to expand...

It isn't how bonds work it is how public financing works.
 
C

CCFCSteve

Well-Known Member
  • Jan 27, 2023
  • #25,702
shmmeee said:
Have you ever worked in private industry? That happens all the time.
Click to expand...

Agreed but I’m not paying for it
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
  • Jan 27, 2023
  • #25,703
CCFCSteve said:
Agreed but I’m not paying for it
Click to expand...

Well you are in some form. I believe HS2 still pays for itself though. Down to 1.3 x but still profitable.
 

fernandopartridge

Well-Known Member
  • Jan 27, 2023
  • #25,704
skybluetony176 said:
So like I said then. They’re borrowing it.
Click to expand...

I know you're a natural Tory, Tony, but the government is not a household.

It does not borrow money from anywhere. It creates all of the money it spends. It uses products like bonds to create safe investments which help to reduce the potential inflationary pressures from spending. It does not depend on the borrowing for the spending. The spending will always happen first.
 
Reactions: Ian1779

skybluetony176

Well-Known Member
  • Jan 27, 2023
  • #25,705
fernandopartridge said:
It isn't how bonds work it is how public financing works.
Click to expand...
In the case of HS2 the government has raised the public finances through bonds. So like I said, they’re borrowing it.
 
C

CCFCSteve

Well-Known Member
  • Jan 27, 2023
  • #25,706
fernandopartridge said:
Do you think the grant-in-aid is open ended?

High Speed Two 6-monthly report to Parliament: October 2022

Review of HS2 including programme update, local community impact and engagement, environment, benefits and programme governance.
www.gov.uk

There is a budget like anything else. Its last published accounts stated that it delivered what it had intended to broadly within the budget for the year.

It's a myth that the private sector perfectly manages budgets, the only reason that perception exists is because it does not have to report so publicly like the public sector does. Everybody is subject to the same cost pressures.
Click to expand...

Im not saying the private sector is perfect, not by a long way, many businesses aren’t which is why they go bust (public sector never has that worry which is maybe one if the cultural drivers, it’s human nature)

Have a look at defence procurement, the nhs IT system that was canned etc, even all the pandemic stuff. Its frightening
 
C

CCFCSteve

Well-Known Member
  • Jan 27, 2023
  • #25,707
shmmeee said:
Well you are in some form. I believe HS2 still pays for itself though. Down to 1.3 x but still profitable.
Click to expand...

I haven’t got a major issue with HS2. I’d have just done North down as I said earlier. I actually want more infrastructure spending, if it was properly controlled and things completed a bit quicker. I just don’t have much confidence in politicians of any political persuasion and civil servants to deliver this
 

skybluetony176

Well-Known Member
  • Jan 27, 2023
  • #25,708
fernandopartridge said:
I know you're a natural Tory, Tony, but the government is not a household.

It does not borrow money from anywhere. It creates all of the money it spends. It uses products like bonds to create safe investments which help to reduce the potential inflationary pressures from spending. It does not depend on the borrowing for the spending. The spending will always happen first.
Click to expand...
I’ve never suggested by any stretch of the imagination that the government is like a household. You’re adding your own context rather than admit that the government are issuing bonds to borrow the money to build HS2. Which is all I pointed out. The facts are the UK is seen as an unattractive place to invest, including gilts. The BOE tried to support the market by buying up government bonds in October after the Truss/Kwartang soap opera but that was largely unsuccessful. People are not queuing up at the moment to buy government bonds (BOE aside), especially the pension market. This latest car crash in the HS2 history could be as much to do with the cost of government borrowing required to build this section as anything else.

And as for calling me a natural Tory don’t make me laugh when you’ve done more to facilitate this government than I ever have.
 
D

Deleted member 5849

Guest
  • Jan 27, 2023
  • #25,709
CCFCSteve said:
I’d have just done North down as I said earlier.
Click to expand...
North is where it was supposed to be needed more, but they started with London, scrapped the Leeds section... just shows it's bollocks really.

Levelling up, my arse.
 
Reactions: CCFCSteve
C

CCFCSteve

Well-Known Member
  • Jan 27, 2023
  • #25,710
skybluetony176 said:
I’ve never suggested by any stretch of the imagination that the government is like a household. You’re adding your own context rather than admit that the government are issuing bonds to borrow the money to build HS2. Which is all I pointed out. The facts are the UK is seen as an unattractive place to invest, including gilts. The BOE tried to support the market by buying up government bonds in October after the Truss/Kwartang soap opera but that was largely unsuccessful. People are not queuing up at the moment to buy government bonds (BOE aside), especially the pension market. This latest car crash in the HS2 history could be as much to do with the cost of government borrowing required to build this section as anything else.

And as for calling me a natural Tory don’t make me laugh when you’ve done more to facilitate this government than I ever have.
Click to expand...

I won’t get into the bond convo but just a clarity point. The demand is there now people have a bit more confidence following truss/Kwarteng shitshow

UK 30-year bond sale draws strongest demand in over a year

Britain received the highest demand in more than a year at a sale of 30-year government bonds on Tuesday, attracting some 68.4 billion pounds of orders for a new gilt which matures in October 2053 . ... -January 24, 2023 at 11:55 am EST - MarketScreener
www.marketscreener.com
 
C

CCFCSteve

Well-Known Member
  • Jan 27, 2023
  • #25,711
Deleted member 5849 said:
North is where it was supposed to be needed more, but they started with London, scrapped the Leeds section... just shows it's bollocks really.

Levelling up, my arse.
Click to expand...

Crazy isn’t it. Poor planning and budgeting, now it’s become a bit toxic due to the costs, which is a shame as we do need more infrastructure spending
 
D

Deleted member 5849

Guest
  • Jan 27, 2023
  • #25,712
CCFCSteve said:
Crazy isn’t it. Poor planning and budgeting
Click to expand...
Not really. Politically expedient to say one thing and do another.
 
C

CCFCSteve

Well-Known Member
  • Jan 27, 2023
  • #25,713
Deleted member 5849 said:
Not really. Politically expedient to say one thing and do another.
Click to expand...

If the project was anywhere near budget, even 20, 30, 40% more then I can’t imagine canning the northern section/parts of it would even be being discussed. Last time I saw the estimate for completion was 2-3 times original budget
 

clint van damme

Well-Known Member
  • Jan 27, 2023
  • #25,714
Just like the pandemic, just like the Teeside freeport, HS2 will be a huge opportunity for the tory spivs and speculators to make money and the public will end up footing the bill.
 
Reactions: PVA

skybluetony176

Well-Known Member
  • Jan 27, 2023
  • #25,715
CCFCSteve said:
I won’t get into the bond convo but just a clarity point. The demand is there now people have a bit more confidence following truss/Kwarteng shitshow

UK 30-year bond sale draws strongest demand in over a year

Britain received the highest demand in more than a year at a sale of 30-year government bonds on Tuesday, attracting some 68.4 billion pounds of orders for a new gilt which matures in October 2053 . ... -January 24, 2023 at 11:55 am EST - MarketScreener
www.marketscreener.com
Click to expand...
Highest in a year isn’t exactly bragging rights though. You have to put that into context. It’s bit like the Tories bragging that they’ve put 10k officers on the streets without acknowledging that they took off 20k first. The fact is this is largely catch-up following the events of last September and October, as the article points out. The other fact is after the pound devalued in 2016 and never really recovered the gilt market has found it a lot more difficult than it did before. The strength of the pound is a major factor in the government’s ability to raise bonds and at what value. The country is fucked. If the government can’t even get a flagship infrastructure another 7 miles down the line the writing is on the wall.

For what it’s worth I agree with you. We’ve just got to bite the bullet and get it finished. Might as well mothball everything already done otherwise.
 
D

Deleted member 5849

Guest
  • Jan 27, 2023
  • #25,716
CCFCSteve said:
If the project was anywhere near budget, even 20, 30, 40% more then I can’t imagine canning the northern section/parts of it would even be being discussed. Last time I saw the estimate for completion was 2-3 times original budget
Click to expand...
If you tart with the bits that are needed most, you care more about budget. The fact they start with the least needed, and let it go over without considering whether to keep the northern section or not, shows how little it actually matters.
 
S

SBT

Well-Known Member
  • Jan 27, 2023
  • #25,717
In case anyone is struggling for Friday night plans:



Big get for the first show’s main interview, wonder who they have lined up for week #2.
 
Reactions: clint van damme

clint van damme

Well-Known Member
  • Jan 27, 2023
  • #25,718
SBT said:
In case anyone is struggling for Friday night plans:

View attachment 28219

Big get for the first show’s main interview, wonder who they have lined up for week #2.
Click to expand...

Nads doing a talk show! Jonathan Dross!
 

skybluetony176

Well-Known Member
  • Jan 27, 2023
  • #25,719
clint van damme said:
Just like the pandemic, just like the Teeside freeport, HS2 will be a huge opportunity for the tory spivs and speculators to make money and the public will end up footing the bill.
Click to expand...

HS2 on track for approval after Tory donors warn Boris Johnson

Boris Johnson will give the green light to the HS2 high-speed rail project on Tuesday and announce further spending on infrastructure projects.The cabinet will give an immediate go-ahead to the London to Birmingham spur and the Birmingham to Crewe western arm of the Y-shaped route. The Manchester to
www.thetimes.co.uk
 

skybluetony176

Well-Known Member
  • Jan 27, 2023
  • #25,720
clint van damme said:
Nads doing a talk show! Jonathan Dross!
Click to expand...
Boris is her first guest.
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
  • Jan 27, 2023
  • #25,721
CCFCSteve said:
I haven’t got a major issue with HS2. I’d have just done North down as I said earlier. I actually want more infrastructure spending, if it was properly controlled and things completed a bit quicker. I just don’t have much confidence in politicians of any political persuasion and civil servants to deliver this
Click to expand...

That’s the real problem that needs solving is the time it takes us to do infrastructure projects like this. We should have a proper midlands metro, better regional links, and a high speed spine. Going from London to the midlands is such a culture shock in terms of transport.

Anyway this has been denied by the govt so let’s see.
 
D

Deleted member 5849

Guest
  • Jan 27, 2023
  • #25,722
shmmeee said:
Anyway this has been denied by the govt
Click to expand...
Guaranteed it won't go to Euston, then.
 

skybluetony176

Well-Known Member
  • Jan 27, 2023
  • #25,723
shmmeee said:
Anyway this has been denied by the govt so let’s see.
Click to expand...
Has it? Might have missed it but all I heard Hunt say was that it’s unthinkable that it wouldn’t go to Euston. Didn’t commit to any date so the Sun article stating it won’t be until 2038 may still be right.
 

Grendel

Well-Known Member
  • Jan 27, 2023
  • #25,724
skybluetony176 said:
And as for calling me a natural Tory don’t make me laugh when you’ve done more to facilitate this government than I ever have.
Click to expand...

You have admitted you naturally are a Tory and the only real deviations up to 2017 were Blair and then Corbyn and of course UKIP (the latter two somewhat ironic given your supposed Brexit stance)
 

Sky_Blue_Dreamer

Well-Known Member
  • Jan 27, 2023
  • #25,725
I've always expected the northern parts of HS2 to get canned at some point as rather than improving the north is was all about getting people to London and being able to use BHX as airport capacity for London.

Never did I expect that it wouldn't actually get into Central London. If it doesn't the entire project is pointless.
 
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