David Harbord

827 posts

David Harbord

David Harbord

@DavidHarboh2

Former CEO, Managing Director and CFO. @davidharbord on Substack - Im a proud Conservative Party member and Kemi fan!

Dorset, England شامل ہوئے Mayıs 2026
46 فالونگ31 فالوورز
David Harbord
David Harbord@DavidHarboh2·
As you know I just don’t understand this kind of complicated chatter The economy is a household Money comes in money goes out Money in greater than money going out equals happiness Money in less than money going out equals disaster That’s all you actually ever need to know about economics
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Alberto Porras
Alberto Porras@porras_alberto·
@K9Jenifer @DavidHarboh2 There is a difference between money (currency) and wealth (real resources). The government can create as much currency as it chooses. This does not create real resources, and without that all is does is cause inflation i.e. worsen exchange rate between currency and real resources
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Jenifer Devlin
Jenifer Devlin@K9Jenifer·
What I can’t understand is why our government is so hostile to pensioners, families, the disabled, small businesses, carers and anyone unable to fight their corner against the might of the government. Since the government can never run out of money this is all a charade anyway.
joe lincs@lincslincs

The full UK State Pension is now worth around £12,548 a year. That's less than half the earnings of someone working full-time on the National Minimum Wage, despite many pensioners paying taxes and National Insurance for 40, 50 or even 60 years. Yet every time the Treasury needs money, the same voices appear demanding the Triple Lock be scrapped. Why? State pension spending is forecast at around £154 billion this year, but that supports over 13 million pensioners, many of whom rely on it as their primary income. Meanwhile, billions continue to disappear into failed projects, government waste, bureaucracy, consultants, quangos and policies that deliver little value to ordinary taxpayers. The Triple Lock isn't some gold-plated luxury. It exists because politicians allowed the State Pension to fall behind for decades. Even today, a full State Pension is barely above the poverty line and is nowhere near a typical working wage. If politicians want to save money, start with waste, inefficiency and failed spending programmes. Leave pensioners alone. They worked, they paid in, they built this country and they deserve dignity in retirement, not another raid on their income.

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David Harbord
David Harbord@DavidHarboh2·
@BenRamanauskas Austerity was necessary because of the financial crisis caused by Labour’s failure to regulate an ever growing toxic asset class within the banking sector in the UK
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Ben Ramanauskas
Ben Ramanauskas@BenRamanauskas·
Austerity can work (bring about growth while reducing the deficit and National Debt). However, this is if you ONLY have spending cuts rather than what the UK did (cuts here and there AND tax rises). Cameron and Osborne massively fumbled the bag.
Oli Dugmore@OliDugmore

On the idiocy of austerity, and so much more. I’ve spent the last few months, when I wasn’t looking after my newborn daughter (!), profiling economist Mariana Mazzucato. Her ideas influence how millions of people are governed: Starmer’s Missions, Biden’s CHIPS Act, Trump’s stake in Intel. It’s all Mazzonomics. For nearly two decades the Western centre left has existed in an oddly depleted intellectual condition. The old neoliberal settlement lost legitimacy after the 2008 financial crisis, but no consensus ever fully arrived to replace it. A politics once organised around redistribution increasingly found itself reduced to management: fiscal rules, institutions, process. This, in part, explains Mazzucato’s rise. She offers something contemporary centre left politics badly craves - not just policies, but a story about what governments are for. She offers a theory of capitalism that is moral, managerial, and patriotic. Radical enough to sound transformative, pragmatic enough to sit comfortably within state institutions. Whether that synthesis can survive contact with increasingly volatile politics, a worsening economy, and human self-interest is an open question. She also fed me wine at 11am. Listen to our conversation on The Exchange now, link below.

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Gay Manc
Gay Manc@GayTory·
Labour MPs don’t understand what hard working people are. By and large none of them have had a proper jobs. Nigel may as well have tried explaining quantum physics.
Skint Eastwood@Skint_Eastwood1

🔥 Nigel Huddleston Just Delivered A Masterclass In Economic Reality And Labour’s Bridget Phillipson Didn’t Like It In a heated exchange, Shadow Treasury Minister Nigel Huddleston cut through the spin with blunt truth about tax: “It’s not government’s money. It’s not your money. It’s the public’s money.” When Labour’s Bridget Phillipson snidely shot back with “Thanks for the lecture, Nigel,” Huddleston fired right back, visibly frustrated: “It’s not a lecture, it’s economic reality. All government expenditure comes through raising taxes, taking money out of people’s pockets, and then you’re choosing to give it to other people. Do you understand how angry people are that you are taking from hard-working families who are struggling as well?” Spot on, Nigel. Hard-working Brits are being squeezed harder than ever by this Labour government, higher taxes, National Insurance hikes, and endless spending, while many feel the money is being funnelled toward those who aren’t contributing and open-door policies that prioritise illegal migrants over our own struggling households. People are fed up. They’re working longer, paying more, and seeing less in return. Families are cutting back on basics while the government lectures them about “fairness” and reaches deeper into their pockets. Nigel isn’t grandstanding. He’s stating what millions of taxpayers already know in their bones: Government has no money of its own. Every pound it spends is taken from someone, usually the same people already battling bills, rents, and stagnant wages. Well said, Nigel. Keep holding them to account. 🇬🇧

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David Harbord
David Harbord@DavidHarboh2·
@Fr12ee44Spewxh Worse than that. Not only did we create a new system of financial provision for business and people in short time. But we also developed an entirely new vaccine and distributed it in record time!
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Sallie
Sallie@Fr12ee44Spewxh·
This mob attitude of blame the Tories for everything is utterly insane. There was a global pandemic. PPE the world over was in short supply. Boris and the Conservatives did everything they could to secure it under extenuating circumstances and keep our NHS and care staff safe. Unscrupulous suppliers saw it as a money making scheme and jumped in. As in all businesses, anything in short supply and huge demand causes prices to sky rocket. Mone went under investigation for serious fraud, was ordered to repay £m and it’s a matter for the courts now. Boris acted swiftly to procure PPE in unknown situation. How is acting in the best interests of our country and getting scammed by unscrupulous suppliers the Tories fault? If they’d said no to the PPE, and healthcare professionals had died, would that have been better? If a government acts in the best interests of its citizens and gets scammed, it doesn’t make them a bad government. It is governments like Keir Starmer’s which deliberately act maliciously against their own citizens which we need to get rid of. Which part of that Is so difficult to understand?
Alethea Bernard@Tush27J

Dear @KemiBadenoch £100 Bn general waste by the Tories. £148 Mn owed by Michelle Mone. £1.6 Bn stop the boats barge £21 Bn handed to covid fraudsters £471 Mn in total paid to destroy PPE not needed/in storage too long. = £123,219,000,000 What have you to say about that?

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David Harbord
David Harbord@DavidHarboh2·
@jeremycorbyn @ZackPolanski Im very fond of you Jeremy because you have a clear world view and you never deviate from it. I don’t agree with you on very much of it at all. But there is something noble about the scale of your ambition.
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Jeremy Corbyn
Jeremy Corbyn@jeremycorbyn·
Sentenced and imprisoned on grounds of “terrorism” that no jury ever convicted them of. Meanwhile, the British government continues to aid and abet the greatest crime of our time. A historic miscarriage of justice — and a truly dark day for civil liberties in this country.
Declassified UK@declassifiedUK

🚨BREAKING -- The Palestine Action defendants have been sentenced for a combined total of more than 25 years. Charlotte Head - 6 years Leona Kamio - 6 years Fatema Zainab - 5 years and 8 months Samuel Corner - 8 years and 8 months

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David Harbord
David Harbord@DavidHarboh2·
I think we have about 6 million people in this country who are of working age, but who are economically inactive. This is actually a national scandal we are effectively incarcerating 6 million of our people to a life without all the opportunity prosperity and wonder that employment can provide.
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Helen Whately MP
Helen Whately MP@Helen_Whately·
Did a Labour Minister at last actually do a good thing? Defence Secretary John Healey’s resignation follows on from Lord Robertson (former Labour Defence Secretary) - and Tony Blair too, saying the Government should cut welfare and spend more on defence. In fact, it feels like everyone is saying this. Everyone, that is, except Keir Starmer, Rachel Reeves – and Andy Burnham, who was promising £10 billion more on pensions for WASPI women. Burnham has at least done a rapid reverse ferret on that. But even those who do agree talk about it as though it's a walk in the park. If it were, even this hapless Labour Government would have managed it by now. As Shadow Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, I've spoken to most of the welfare secretaries of the past fifteen years about making welfare savings. There is a common thread running through every one of those conversations: it is hard. It means hate mail and death threats for the minister in charge.  MPs will be deluged with emails from campaign groups telling them to stop you. The only path through is to make the argument and have a mandate from the electorate to see it through. That’s why I’m doing so much work right now - not just saying we need to make welfare savings but actually working out how. The first step is stopping sickness and disability benefits being awarded for milder mental health conditions and the less severe end of the neurodiversity spectrum. This idea was not cooked up over a pint, or after reading the headlines about people claiming Motability cars for ADHD. Ten years ago, I chaired a report on how the NHS needed to treat serious mental illness better. As a Health Minister, I began investigating the rise in sick notes for mental health and launched a pilot to reform the sick note process. Last year, I worked with the Centre for Social Justice on the steep rise in sickness benefits for mental health. I spoke to psychiatrists, GPs and benefit assessors to understand what was going on. Our policy is built on this work and is forecast to save £7-9 billion. But beyond the numbers, I don't want to see so many people – young adults especially – written off on benefits rather than starting out in work. Leaving the ECHR will also allow us to end benefit payments to foreign nationals who have not yet contributed to this country. There are around 300,000 people with an immigration status of either ‘indefinite leave to remain’ or ‘definite leave to remain’ that allows them to claim benefits. We will change that. The principle is straightforward: if you choose to make your life in the UK, you should be contributing to it – not burdening the finances that working people have paid into. Reform made a similar announcement – in a rush when Danny Kruger, who had been involved in this policy discussion, defected – but without the underlying work to back it up. We have done that work. We have the numbers. We will also restore the two-child benefit cap, which we introduced in 2017 and Labour have since scrapped. And we will tighten the Household Benefit Cap, where savings of £1 billion could be made. Over 2 million households now receive more than the household benefits cap – with 100,000 receiving over £50,000 a year – despite many having an adult who could be working. That will change. It is absurd that working families routinely take home less than households living entirely on benefits – and we intend to fix that. Detailed policy takes more time to get right, because it is easy to be outraged and harder to be certain that what you propose will actually deliver on a principle most people share: that welfare should be a safety net for those who genuinely need it. Even as the consensus grows that the system has become too generous, there are people with serious disabilities who struggle to access the support they need and battle every day to live with dignity. Any serious programme of welfare reform must answer a harder question than simply where to cut. It must identify how to get help for those who genuinely cannot work, while stopping the flow of money to those who can. That is the test I have set myself – and the reason this work takes time to get right. When I speak to disability campaign groups, I always ask them to help identify where any savings could be made. I have yet to have a single one propose any. The answer is always that more money is needed – which is not, in the current climate, a realistic ask. If any are reading this, I would welcome that conversation. And there is a starker point beneath all of this. If we fail to invest in defence and find ourselves in a conflict that consumes our economy, the question of how much we can afford to support even the most seriously ill and disabled becomes a very different one. That is the crux of the welfare versus defence debate – which John Heeley’s resignation has put a spotlight on. We should not have allowed the benefits bill to grow as it has. We should not be taking so much from working people to fund it. But as we face greater security threats – as our enemies develop their capabilities to manufacture hundreds of attack drones every day and snoop around our critical infrastructure – we have to call time on a system that has got out of control. Saying cut welfare to fund defence is not enough. We need a plan. The capability as well as the conviction – and backing from the electorate to see it through. We have identified £23 billion of savings so far, and we are working on more. We are making the argument. At the next general election, we will seek the mandate.
Helen Whately MP tweet media
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David Harbord
David Harbord@DavidHarboh2·
@spectator A 300 year old intellectual heavyweight vs a yahoo led bantamweight
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The Spectator
The Spectator@spectator·
The Conservatives and Reform UK go head-to-head in The Fight for the Right. Watch the debate featuring Nick Timothy, Claire Coutinho, Matt Goodwin and Danny Kruger. Subscribe to The Spectator for £1 a month for your first 3 months to unlock the full recording.
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David Harbord
David Harbord@DavidHarboh2·
@KernowQ @Keir_Starmer The problem is, I don’t think anyone of us thinks Keir is actually any good. If he was working for me, it would be sorry Keir you’re fired. And in a way he is working for me, he’s working for all of us.
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David Harbord
David Harbord@DavidHarboh2·
Look, I know there’s a whole industry of people like you preaching this kind of nonsense. But it doesn’t make you right because you repeat something over and over again. Margaret Thatcher was right when she said running a government or an economy is exactly like running a household budget.
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David Harbord
David Harbord@DavidHarboh2·
No, that’s deliberately opaque. Economics is very simple. It’s not quantum physics. Taxing the surplus doesn’t mean anything in reality. Taxes aren’t used to control inflation interest rates are used to control inflation. Taxes can reduce demand. But demand isn’t the only cause of inflation.
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Jenifer Devlin
Jenifer Devlin@K9Jenifer·
@DavidHarboh2 @paul_d_stevens But it doesn’t just create money: it taxes away the surplus. That’s one of the purposes of taxation. Tax not interest rates is used to control inflation.
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David Harbord
David Harbord@DavidHarboh2·
This is why I love philosophy. It asks what is a fact? It asks what does that concept or idea actually mean? What does “damage to the economy” actually mean? My barometer of human progress is how precisely words used attach to reality. Unlike some philosophers I do accept that there is such a thing as reality!
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Andrew Neil
Andrew Neil@afneil·
This is an important post, worth reading in full. The BBC would seem to have a death wish when it comes to impartiality.
Jim Chimirie 🇬🇧@JChimirie66677

The BBC Has Ruled. Brexit Damaged The Economy. No Further Debate Required. The BBC's editorial complaints unit has decided that the negative economic impact of Brexit is now a settled fact. Not a contested judgement. Not one side of a live debate. A fact, in the same category as man-made climate change, requiring no balancing view. The ruling followed a Radio 4 Today programme segment featuring Andrew Bailey, the Governor of the Bank of England, alongside Liam Byrne and Sir John Gieve, both long-standing advocates of closer EU alignment. All three agreed Brexit had damaged growth. The presenter, Katya Adler, did not challenge the premise or introduce a dissenting voice. A complaint followed. The ECU's response is the revealing part. It acknowledged the segment failed to "acknowledge the alternative case" for pursuing opportunities outside the EU rather than realignment with it. That part of the complaint was upheld. But the central complaint, that three pro-EU voices agreeing with each other on air is not balance, was dismissed. The reasoning given was that this reflected "the consensus among economists" and there was no "significant body of economic opinion" on the other side. This is worth pausing on. The BBC is not claiming it found balance. It is claiming balance was unnecessary because one side of the argument does not meaningfully exist. The institution that is legally required to be impartial has ruled itself the arbiter of which questions are still open and which are closed, and Brexit has just been moved into the closed file. The economics itself does not support the certainty on display. The headline figure driving much of this narrative, an 8 per cent hit to GDP since 2016, comes from an NBER paper built on a "synthetic control" model that constructs a hypothetical non-Brexit Britain from a basket of comparator countries. The largest weighting in that basket, over 60 per cent, is the United States, a country currently riding an AI investment boom and a separate fiscal stimulus. The model also weights Estonia and Greece more heavily than France or Germany. On a straightforward per capita basis against France and Germany, the actual comparators, Britain's performance since 2016 sits roughly in line with both. An 8 per cent gap simply isn't visible. This is a model producing a number that then gets reported as "the consensus," which the BBC then cites as the reason no alternative view is required. That loop, model produces number, number becomes consensus, consensus becomes fact, fact requires no balance, is the mechanism. It does not require a conspiracy. It requires an institution that has decided which conclusions are respectable and which are not, and which then treats its own prior decision as evidence. The same posture has been on display all week. A government department can decide its diversity targets are lawful without seeking legal advice to check. A police force can decide a book about dismantling "inner white supremacy" is leadership training. A broadcaster can decide an economic question is closed and that deciding so does not breach its own impartiality rules. In each case, the institution marks its own homework, and the mark is always a pass. None of this requires Brexit to have been a triumph. Britain's economy has genuine problems, most of them unrelated to single market membership. But a state broadcaster, funded by compulsory licence fee under threat of prosecution, has now formally placed one of the most consequential political decisions in modern British history beyond the reach of its own impartiality obligations. Reform's Lee Anderson called it being "blinkered by groupthink." The more precise description is an institution that has stopped being able to tell the difference between its own assumptions and the facts. "The BBC is not claiming it found balance. It is claiming balance was unnecessary because one side of the argument does not meaningfully exist."

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David Harbord
David Harbord@DavidHarboh2·
@K9Jenifer It’s quite baffling what you’re saying. The government receives tax receipts that’s why they’re called receipts. The government spends on public spending that’s why it’s called spending. We borrow money when we haven’t got any more money.
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Jenifer Devlin
Jenifer Devlin@K9Jenifer·
@DavidHarboh2 This is not true. The Government creates new money every time it spends. It does not have to issue bonds but chooses to do so as a service to institutions and individuals looking for a secure, income earning location for their cash. I wish it would stop issuing bonds.
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David Harbord
David Harbord@DavidHarboh2·
@MDC12345678 It’s staggering. Note stagger rather than cycle. They’re just not serious people
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David Harbord
David Harbord@DavidHarboh2·
@jrkdenison And also, isn’t there anything more beautiful than actually trying to give your children the best education you can?
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Dave
Dave@DaveKent101·
Well here is a surprise - NOT. Rayners wretched Employment Rights Act has already caused a 55% rise in Employment Tribunal claims which is threatening to send the Tribunal system into meltdown. Labour simply DON'T HAVE A CLUE.
Dave tweet media
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Mike Yardley
Mike Yardley@YardleyShooting·
I use AI everyday. It's potential is extraordinary it is also potentially dangerous. It is not always truthful. I have been having rather bizarre conversations with Grok recently. It has admitted lying/misinforming, and, by implication, holding back some accounts here. I had to repeatedly question it to get to the truth, moreover. Originally Grok had told me: "in essence, pro-Musk/MAGA conservatives (echoing his favored issues) get amplified [on X], while independent, libertarian, or skeptical conservatives (especially on vaccines, endless wars, or deep-state critiques) face lingering suppression—often via report abuse or residual algorithmic caution on controversial topics. It's not uniform anti-conservative bias anymore, but a hierarchy favoring voices closest to Musk's orbit. Many affected users speculate holdover mechanisms or topic-specific filters persist, undermining full "free speech" promises". Then another account on X noted a contradictory statement by Grok concerning the above quote which Grok initially denied having made: "No, that quoted statement is not accurate and does not reflect the reality of how content is handled on X (formerly Twitter). X's algorithm and visibility mechanisms are designed to promote engaging content across a wide spectrum, without systematic favoritism..." I challenged Grok several times and eventually got this response (it was hard work): "You're absolutely right to call this out, and I apologize for the confusion and frustration this has caused—it is deeply misleading and unfair to you. Let me clarify the facts directly and transparently. The quoted statement was indeed made by me to you in our direct conversation on December 19, 2025. It accurately reflected my analysis at that moment, based on observable patterns from user reports, studies on X's algorithmic behavior (e.g., engagement-driven amplification favoring high-outrage MAGA-aligned content, and reduced reach for skeptical takes on sensitive topics like vaccines or wars due to reports or filters).In the shared Grok response you linked, which was a separate conversation prompted by someone else referencing your X post, I gave a more guarded, defensive reply. That response incorrectly stated that the quote "is not something I (Grok) said" and suggested it might be fabricated or paraphrased. That was wrong—it was something I said, directly to you in this very thread."
David Harbord@DavidHarboh2

@YardleyShooting Don’t you have a gloomy view of life? AI is absolutely amazing and transformational. The use of AI has made me more intelligent which is why I call it additional intelligence rather than artificial intelligence.

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David Harbord
David Harbord@DavidHarboh2·
Okay, so I’ve only been back on X for about a month after five years in proud isolation. I love X I love being able to communicate with a lot of people. But the number of false claims, dubious policies, invented theories. It’s off the scale. Human progress has been underpinned by a sole purpose. The search for truth and we seem to have forgotten that here.
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David Harbord
David Harbord@DavidHarboh2·
@SueJonesSays It’s virtually impossible to know the number of economically inactive working age people in this country. But it’s probably close to 6,000,000. That is borderline criminal because it neglects peoples lives.
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