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@m_azzd

Scotland Bergabung Mart 2021
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😄@m_azzd·
@NannyMcphe91003 @DuxVul @RollingHedge Many businesses have limited ability to raise revenues to react to large and fast cost increases other than passing it on to the customer. Eventually the customers stop coming and they have no option but to close down.
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😄@m_azzd·
@NannyMcphe91003 @DuxVul @RollingHedge Yeah it’s insane! 1 pub a day closes in England and wales. It’s not just staff cost increases causing it, although it’s a major factor. In last 5 years staff costs up 43% energy bills up 75% business rates up 75% food and bev up 50-80%. Getting squeezed from every angle.
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😄@m_azzd·
@Proper_Memes @BurnsideWasTosh @ZackPolanski Gary is a terrible conversationalist, couldn’t watch the whole video. Unbelievable patience from the other guy, but it’s futile. Like trying to explain string theory to an adhd 7 yo.
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😄@m_azzd·
@DuxVul @RollingHedge Even the £5 pint, when we crossed that barrier, there was a large amount of people that just stopped drinking in pubs anymore. As a result 1000s of them have gone out of business. The same will happen with coffee shops.
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Dux@DuxVul·
@RollingHedge But at £15 I’m sure we’d see the £6 coffee I don’t think there is a mass market for that Just like there is a mental barrier at the £10 pint People just won’t go out
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😄@m_azzd·
@sarcastic_hedgi @csljohnkirby @spennybig Yeah my analogy is flawed, but my point is 14% of landlords exiting can contribute to much higher prices for existing rental stock as more renters chase fewer available rental properties. Negotiating harder doesn’t help when you’re competing with 50 other potential tenants.
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Sarcastic Hedgie
Sarcastic Hedgie@sarcastic_hedgi·
@m_azzd @csljohnkirby @spennybig 14% of landlords exiting shows up in cap rates and vacancy first, not some overnight supply shock oil's different - bottleneck pricing vs substitute goods. renters don't just vanish when margins compress, they negotiate harder
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Bullard
Bullard@spennybig·
I own an estate agency in hertfordshire, about 14 percent of our landlords have or are selling due to the negative tax and legislative environment. Assuming thats replicated nationally there will be 1.7million less properties for renters in a year, with no plan on replacement
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😄@m_azzd·
@csljohnkirby @spennybig Only 20% of oil flows through the straight of Hormuz, but that 20% has cause a massive impact on global energy prices for instance. The 14% of landlords could quickly rise as renting properties becomes increasingly unprofitable, especially compared with other passive income forms
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😄@m_azzd·
@csljohnkirby @spennybig I agree, we have little housing stock across the board and building more is the only really solution, everything else has large trade offs. 14% of landlords selling or considering selling is massive and will have a disproportionate affect on an already constrained market.
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😄@m_azzd·
@anotherfish759 @Finumus1 Plenty of people are proposing this. The balance is way in the favour of buyers over renters at the moment.
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Oliver Fisk
Oliver Fisk@anotherfish759·
@Finumus1 No one is proposing that all private rental should end. But the current balance is off and it’s too hard to buy. Rebalancing the market away from the insanity of the Blair/brown years is a good thing actually.
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Finumus
Finumus@Finumus1·
This is the issue. There's plenty of people who don't want to, or simply can't, rent. Students, short term work (stamp duty!), foreigners, etc. My Ukrainian refugee sharer tenants aren't going to be buying a house however much housing stock this frees up for owner occupation
Festus Akinbusoye@FestAKINBUSOYE

No. There's a reason why they're renting in the first place even though they are clearly able to pay the monthly mortgage. The deposit, credit reference checks, affordability etc are why many end up renting. If some have not been up to date with rent payments, that's another red flag to mortgage lenders. So as you can see, this is not the dream you think it is.

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😄@m_azzd·
@Billsam390 @NidgeHattersSK Supported greens before they started pining for economic destruction, stopped caring about the environment and became so divisive. Zach Polanskis turned away all the reasonable folks that traditionally voted green to chase after the dumb slogan voters.
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kev t
kev t@Billsam390·
@NidgeHattersSK Are you mad He's the only one appealing to the reasonably minded
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Nidgey@NidgeHattersSK·
Zack Polanski is done. Didn't expect his bubble to burst quite so quickly. Unlucky pal.
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😄@m_azzd·
@csljohnkirby @spennybig They are likely to disappear from the rental market as they are likely being purchased to live in. Nightmare for renters like me.
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John Kirby
John Kirby@csljohnkirby·
Properties do not disappear when landlords sell them. If 1.7 million rental properties were sold, that would also mean up to 1.7 million properties entering the sales market. Some would be bought by owner-occupiers, others by other landlords, and others by councils, housing associations, or investors. The real issue is not “replacement”. It is tenure, affordability and supply. We need more homes overall, but pretending that sold rental homes vanish from the housing stock is not quite right.
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😄@m_azzd·
@SaulStaniforth People’s ability to live on a certain wage has no relationship to the affordability of a wage. Her salary is completely irrelevant.
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Saul Staniforth
Saul Staniforth@SaulStaniforth·
Kuenssberg asks, how can we afford to pay people £15/hour LK, who earns around £400,000/year, doesn't ask, how can people afford to live on less than £15/hour? Neither does she ask, should we be subsidising the profits of businesses by topping up the poverty wages they pay?
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😄@m_azzd·
@ChrisHasla73748 That’s exactly what universal credit should be used for. The issue is it’s not. And life being difficult on 12k doesn’t make life on 50k any easier. Hope things get better for you soon mate!
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Paul Davis
Paul Davis@ChrisHasla73748·
I'm sick and tired of hearing about people moaning that they can't manage on 50k a year due to the cost of living crisis. Try living off 12k a year on universal credit. I'm not on it by choice btw,I was like many others that unfortunately lost their job.
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😄@m_azzd·
@jonnyshort @JamesW1906 @TerraOrBust Restaurant owner here, staffing is the highest cost for hospitality businesses. If those costs increased another 25%, 99% of them would fail in their current form. A well run efficient hospitality business has single digit profit margins these days.
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jonny short
jonny short@jonnyshort·
@JamesW1906 @TerraOrBust Do people I’m replying to run a hospitality business? I’m sure shelling minimum wage out is an issue but surely not the fundamental one.
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Gully Foyle #UKTrade
Gully Foyle #UKTrade@TerraOrBust·
This is a really good explanation. Ultimately you need to add more value per hour to a business, than you cost per hour to employ, for a business to bother employing you. Someone on £15 an hour costs around £22-23 an hour to the business to employ.
Peter McCormack 🏴‍☠️🇬🇧🇮🇪@PeterMcCormack

A minimum wage of £15 would end my coffee shop, it would have to close, as would many other businesses. I’ll explain for the economically illiterate. Staff costs are currently half our costs, a £15 minimum wage is actually more than £15 an hour for the company, because you have to add: - 12.07% holiday - Sick pay - Maternity pay if and when required - National insurance - Pension contributions These costs would mean the shop loses money because remember, energy costs are up, rates are up, regulations are up. Now you can pass these costs onto the consumer - that would mean charging a lot more for coffee, people won’t pay it. The likes of Starbucks and Costa can, because they have economies of scale. The independent doesn’t. Now the little socialist will say well this is your fault, if you can’t run a business that can afford to pay its staff properly, but the little socialist has never run a business and does not understand the dynamics. Now I could pay some staff off and fill those hours myself or reduce us to one staff member during certain periods - but this proves the point that a minimum wage costs jobs. There was a time when these jobs were done by kids, perhaps on the weekend, paid a lower wage, no holiday and no silly employment rights. Perhaps they were even paid cash. The dynamic worked and small businesses like this could operate. It was also a great first job. Sadly now it isn’t worth employing entitlement youngsters at this level of pay. So alas, I don’t need the stress, the business would close, a number of jobs would be lost. Economics is about understanding these dynamics, no vibes. The cost of living is not solved through passing on inflation to the business, it is solved by ending high inflation and creating prosperity. This is what socialists don’t understand, they can’t create prosperity, they can only destroy it.

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😄@m_azzd·
@PhilipProudfoot @JamesMainw41767 Genuinely interested what you think should happen, these businesses shut down. Millions unemployed, tax revenues plummet, 100s of 1000s business close. You think the country would be a better place then?
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Philip Proudfoot
Philip Proudfoot@PhilipProudfoot·
@JamesMainw41767 I don’t think a small business is viable if it can’t afford to pay its workers enough to live on. I don’t see anything you’ve said here that disproves my point?
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Philip Proudfoot
Philip Proudfoot@PhilipProudfoot·
Don’t particularly feel sorry for any business owner whose enterprise is only viable because they pay poverty wages.
Peter McCormack 🏴‍☠️🇬🇧🇮🇪@PeterMcCormack

A minimum wage of £15 would end my coffee shop, it would have to close, as would many other businesses. I’ll explain for the economically illiterate. Staff costs are currently half our costs, a £15 minimum wage is actually more than £15 an hour for the company, because you have to add: - 12.07% holiday - Sick pay - Maternity pay if and when required - National insurance - Pension contributions These costs would mean the shop loses money because remember, energy costs are up, rates are up, regulations are up. Now you can pass these costs onto the consumer - that would mean charging a lot more for coffee, people won’t pay it. The likes of Starbucks and Costa can, because they have economies of scale. The independent doesn’t. Now the little socialist will say well this is your fault, if you can’t run a business that can afford to pay its staff properly, but the little socialist has never run a business and does not understand the dynamics. Now I could pay some staff off and fill those hours myself or reduce us to one staff member during certain periods - but this proves the point that a minimum wage costs jobs. There was a time when these jobs were done by kids, perhaps on the weekend, paid a lower wage, no holiday and no silly employment rights. Perhaps they were even paid cash. The dynamic worked and small businesses like this could operate. It was also a great first job. Sadly now it isn’t worth employing entitlement youngsters at this level of pay. So alas, I don’t need the stress, the business would close, a number of jobs would be lost. Economics is about understanding these dynamics, no vibes. The cost of living is not solved through passing on inflation to the business, it is solved by ending high inflation and creating prosperity. This is what socialists don’t understand, they can’t create prosperity, they can only destroy it.

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😄@m_azzd·
@NiallFraser8 How does one get to be an adult and have such fundamental misunderstandings of how the world works.
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😄@m_azzd·
@bbcdebatenight Reality just doesn’t ever make an appearance in these people’s thought process. Madness.
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BBC Debate Night
BBC Debate Night@bbcdebatenight·
"Your generation face this problem because we’re part of a system... it only works for a small number of super rich elites" The SNP's Jack Middleton says society “doesn’t work” for young people, pledging help towards home deposits and rent caps #bbcdn
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😄@m_azzd·
@MacRumors I was hoping to buy one in the next 5-10 years when the price, battery life and weight got to an acceptable point! Hopefully they revisit when the tech allows - it’s got awesome potential!
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Benjamin
Benjamin@FleetsAndTweets·
Hey @Morrisons please stop selling @LaFamigliaRana foods. I needed something quick for dinner so I bought this. The box photo of the food is 100% false advertising. 3 tiny cubes of beef. This is just oxtail soup with pasta.
Benjamin tweet mediaBenjamin tweet media
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Bilal Farooqui
Bilal Farooqui@bilalfarooqui·
SpaceX just tied Elon Musk’s comp to achieving a $7.5T market cap and building a 1M person colony on Mars A Delaware judge 20 years from now: this was really easy to do and we will take his comp back
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😄@m_azzd·
@scottishgreens He’s paid more tax than your leadership could in 1000 lifetimes. Bunch of spongers.
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