Definitely want the best and brightest, but people like that can't possibly account for a rise of some 59,000 dependents from Nigeria alone in the span of 3 years as the figures seem to show.yermum wrote: ↑Wed May 24, 2023 11:26 am Radio 4 had an interview with a Nigerian postgraduate student who had come to study an MSc at Cambridge with her young family. She was spending a huge amount of money and would not have come without her family.
Her point was well made that folk like her were the best and brightest with large financial backing. Surely global Britain should be attracting these people….
Stop voting for fucking Tories
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That's about the sum of it. Immigration is populist rocket fuel, it's not really about the actual facts. To appease the goons the UK government/Home Office goes after what it can, which is anyone playing by the rules, in other words international students and long term residents. in the worst cases legal migrants are turned into illegal migrants. The outcome being that the issue becomes harder to manage and there's no impact on the numbers. The UK now has the toughest visa regime it's ever had and the net migration figures are probably the highest in the entire history of the British Isles (certainly in absolute terms).Lobby wrote: ↑Wed May 24, 2023 10:57 am In my view, successive Home Secretaries have concentrated their ire on student visas (despite the demonstrably positive benefit to the Country that overseas students bring, not least in subsidising the entire HE system in the UK) because it was one of the few areas of immigration that they can control through the visa system. Its a red herring designed to distract attention from their failure to have an effective asylum system or to deal with illegal immigration.
The facts on students are clear enough. If international students are reduced, then UK students will have to pay higher fees and/or there'll need to be more tax money pumped into the system, or if neither of those happens and international student numbers decline the quality of the entire UK uni system declines. New graduates already have an effective tax rate of 43%-52% (when student loans are factored in), in conditions where wages have stagnated for over a decade. If fees increase going to university in the UK will become unaffordable for many, but the UK economy will still be services dominated and it'll still be the case a 2:1 is needed to stand any chance of getting onto the career ladder at a decent starting rung. There'll be real costs felt by ordinary British citizens if international student numbers are cut, which is why the Tories set a target (in about 2018?) for increasing the numbers to 600k by 2030. That 600k target has now been met 8 years ahead of schedule and the Education Secretary said she was "hugely proud" of this just last week.
As it goes for the university sector it does for other sectors and immigration generally. The UK's political economy (basically Thatcherism) has more or less failed, it's kept alive by massive waves of migration. The UK's historic position (empire etc), means there'll always be migrants if it wants them. So rather than a difficult conversation (much tougher than the Brexit) about remaking the UK's political economy which will entail some losing out, the UK is instead heading towards needing net 1m immigrants per year as a structural necessity. It's interesting working out net immigration as a % of the UK's population, then comparing that to the % of GDP growth, seems to me a lot of the UK's growth is simply about adding more people. But maybe this isn't strictly failure, one of the models for Thatcherism was Hong Kong, a place which depended on immigrant labour for decades, the difference being they are/were all Chinese so this tends to be ignored by foreigners.
Yep uk growth is not due to increases in productivity. This failure in thatcherism is why the Tory partly is flailing around ineptly but moves in other directions require acknowledging this failure._Os_ wrote: ↑Wed May 24, 2023 11:59 amThat's about the sum of it. Immigration is populist rocket fuel, it's not really about the actual facts. To appease the goons the UK government/Home Office goes after what it can, which is anyone playing by the rules, in other words international students and long term residents. in the worst cases legal migrants are turned into illegal migrants. The outcome being that the issue becomes harder to manage and there's no impact on the numbers. The UK now has the toughest visa regime it's ever had and the net migration figures are probably the highest in the entire history of the British Isles (certainly in absolute terms).Lobby wrote: ↑Wed May 24, 2023 10:57 am In my view, successive Home Secretaries have concentrated their ire on student visas (despite the demonstrably positive benefit to the Country that overseas students bring, not least in subsidising the entire HE system in the UK) because it was one of the few areas of immigration that they can control through the visa system. Its a red herring designed to distract attention from their failure to have an effective asylum system or to deal with illegal immigration.
The facts on students are clear enough. If international students are reduced, then UK students will have to pay higher fees and/or there'll need to be more tax money pumped into the system, or if neither of those happens and international student numbers decline the quality of the entire UK uni system declines. New graduates already have an effective tax rate of 43%-52% (when student loans are factored in), in conditions where wages have stagnated for over a decade. If fees increase going to university in the UK will become unaffordable for many, but the UK economy will still be services dominated and it'll still be the case a 2:1 is needed to stand any chance of getting onto the career ladder at a decent starting rung. There'll be real costs felt by ordinary British citizens if international student numbers are cut, which is why the Tories set a target (in about 2018?) for increasing the numbers to 600k by 2030. That 600k target has now been met 8 years ahead of schedule and the Education Secretary said she was "hugely proud" of this just last week.
As it goes for the university sector it does for other sectors and immigration generally. The UK's political economy (basically Thatcherism) has more or less failed, it's kept alive by massive waves of migration. The UK's historic position (empire etc), means there'll always be migrants if it wants them. So rather than a difficult conversation (much tougher than the Brexit) about remaking the UK's political economy which will entail some losing out, the UK is instead heading towards needing net 1m immigrants per year as a structural necessity. It's interesting working out net immigration as a % of the UK's population, then comparing that to the % of GDP growth, seems to me a lot of the UK's growth is simply about adding more people. But maybe this isn't strictly failure, one of the models of Thatcherism was Hong Kong, a place which depended on immigrant labour for decades, the difference being they are/were all Chinese so this tends to be ignored by foreigners.
Rather than trying to quote everyone individually, I post this, from a site called Total Student Care
Funnily enough, the rise coincided with
Number of EU students enrolling in UK universities halves post-Brexit
https://www.theguardian.com/education/2 ... nce-brexit
This is still not my main point, which I simply can't keep repeating, but I'll wait and see what happens in the lead up to the next election.
UK’s new simplified and favourable student visa Rules, post study work visa opportunity and switching to other immigration category towards settlement visa are key motivational factors to Nigerian students for choosing to study in the UK.
01/11/2022
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On the new international education strategy of UK introduced in 2019, Nigeria was listed as one of five high-priority countries which were target source markets for international students. UK’s streamlined student visa Rules launched in October 2020 opened up its borders to attract more international students. The re-introduction of Graduate Route Visa (Post Study Work) Visa for graduates to stay back and work for 2/3 years, find skilled work visa and rights to switch to other immigration route in the UK proved to be extremely popular among Nigerian students and they have been taking full advantages to these.
Between 2012 and 2017, the UK saw a 27% drop in international students from Nigeria. But the numbers has been increased every year my big margins since the launch of new international education strategy by UK. Of the total 486,868 Sponsored study visas granted by UK in the year ending 2022, Nigerian students were granted 65,929 visas which is 57545 higher than visas issued in year ending 2019 (8,384), nearly an eight-fold increase (686%) – this is the largest relative increase in Sponsored Study visa grants to any national compared with 2019. In the year ending 2021, 36783 Nigerian students came to study in the UK, this number increased by 29,146 to 65,929 in the year ending 2022, in the space of just 1 year and Nigeria becomes the top 3 country after India and China for sponsored study visa in the UK.
Nigerian postgraduate student brought the highest number of dependants to the UK, 40% of all dependants who accompanied foreign students in the 12 months to year ending June 2022. Some Nigerian students selling landed properties, house, cars, personal belongings, furniture and other assets to raise money while others taking loans from financial institutions to come and settle in the UK. To them this is a high-stake investment that will pay off many more times and they are happy to take this high risk to flee from the country where government has anti-youth policy, high youth unemployment, economic woes, including record high inflation, and a crippled education system.
Funnily enough, the rise coincided with
Number of EU students enrolling in UK universities halves post-Brexit
https://www.theguardian.com/education/2 ... nce-brexit
This is still not my main point, which I simply can't keep repeating, but I'll wait and see what happens in the lead up to the next election.
- Paddington Bear
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They're not planning on going home. I don't blame them, I'd do exactly the same. But again, let's be honest about what we're dealing with here and not pretend it is some cost-free win/win.take this high risk to flee from the country
Old men forget: yet all shall be forgot, But he'll remember with advantages, What feats he did that day
HK is the model. They never mention HK now and prefer mentioning Singapore or other places. But HK remains the model. A place with massive immigration from China (before and after British rule), much higher cost of living than other comparable cities in East Asia (in HK's case because of retail concentration), and massively expensive property prices not because there's no land in HK (that's a stereotype) but because they refuse to build. There's even manufacturing decline (unique in East Asia when compared to economies which were once HK's peers in manufacturing, or HK was ahead of in some ways, Japan/South Korea/Taiwan) and its replacement with services.
HK's political economy has spooky similarities to the UK.
With a lot of Tories this is almost their religion though. It has failed, but they don't care. They pretend Truss didn't blow up their entire project in such a short timespan it's not really deniable, they just ignore it. They're never losing faith in this, if they did, literally who would fund their party?
Paddington Bear wrote: ↑Wed May 24, 2023 12:22 pmThey're not planning on going home. I don't blame them, I'd do exactly the same. But again, let's be honest about what we're dealing with here and not pretend it is some cost-free win/win.take this high risk to flee from the country
Do you know how difficult it is to get a graduate level job in the UK after a visa runs out?
Unless these folk are going to rack up a >fifty grand debt in order to pick sprouts in a field over the winter they are going to find it difficult to find work
Fair enough, thanks.Biffer wrote: ↑Wed May 24, 2023 6:01 amCivil servants have a duty to report information relevant to a crime under investigation.
- Paddington Bear
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Some will, some won't. Those like the woman referenced who did a postgrad course at Cambridge will get high flying jobs and be a fantastic asset for the country. Those that some of us have referenced who can't pass basic English tests, are at very low calibre unis doing low calibre courses or are involved in the systematic cheating that takes place on university assessments may well chance their arm (they wouldn't get a decent grad job anyway). It's a mixed issue.Tichtheid wrote: ↑Wed May 24, 2023 12:52 pmPaddington Bear wrote: ↑Wed May 24, 2023 12:22 pmThey're not planning on going home. I don't blame them, I'd do exactly the same. But again, let's be honest about what we're dealing with here and not pretend it is some cost-free win/win.take this high risk to flee from the country
Do you know how difficult it is to get a graduate level job in the UK after a visa runs out?
Unless these folk are going to rack up a >fifty grand debt in order to pick sprouts in a field over the winter they are going to find it difficult to find work
Old men forget: yet all shall be forgot, But he'll remember with advantages, What feats he did that day
Paddington Bear wrote: ↑Wed May 24, 2023 12:58 pmSome will, some won't. Those like the woman referenced who did a postgrad course at Cambridge will get high flying jobs and be a fantastic asset for the country. Those that some of us have referenced who can't pass basic English tests, are at very low calibre unis doing low calibre courses or are involved in the systematic cheating that takes place on university assessments may well chance their arm (they wouldn't get a decent grad job anyway). It's a mixed issue.Tichtheid wrote: ↑Wed May 24, 2023 12:52 pmPaddington Bear wrote: ↑Wed May 24, 2023 12:22 pm
They're not planning on going home. I don't blame them, I'd do exactly the same. But again, let's be honest about what we're dealing with here and not pretend it is some cost-free win/win.
Do you know how difficult it is to get a graduate level job in the UK after a visa runs out?
Unless these folk are going to rack up a >fifty grand debt in order to pick sprouts in a field over the winter they are going to find it difficult to find work
Do you know what the responsibilities of the employers are regarding employees without valid visas, and therefore the penalties they can face?
I'll save you a google, it's up to twenty grand fine per worker and up to five years in prison, or both
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Wouldn't make it my specialist subject on mastermind but I understand it is reasonably onerous. You gave an example of work that might fall outside of this, there are plenty of others and plenty of people willing to exploit/take advantage of those who think living here illegally is better than going home. Your point is a bit of a 'no one drink drives/dodges taxes, it's illegal' style one.Tichtheid wrote: ↑Wed May 24, 2023 1:02 pmPaddington Bear wrote: ↑Wed May 24, 2023 12:58 pmSome will, some won't. Those like the woman referenced who did a postgrad course at Cambridge will get high flying jobs and be a fantastic asset for the country. Those that some of us have referenced who can't pass basic English tests, are at very low calibre unis doing low calibre courses or are involved in the systematic cheating that takes place on university assessments may well chance their arm (they wouldn't get a decent grad job anyway). It's a mixed issue.
Do you know what the responsibilities of the employers are regarding employees without valid visas, and therefore the penalties they can face?
Old men forget: yet all shall be forgot, But he'll remember with advantages, What feats he did that day
Paddington Bear wrote: ↑Wed May 24, 2023 1:06 pmWouldn't make it my specialist subject on mastermind but I understand it is reasonably onerous. You gave an example of work that might fall outside of this, there are plenty of others and plenty of people willing to exploit/take advantage of those who think living here illegally is better than going home. Your point is a bit of a 'no one drink drives/dodges taxes, it's illegal' style one.Tichtheid wrote: ↑Wed May 24, 2023 1:02 pmPaddington Bear wrote: ↑Wed May 24, 2023 12:58 pm
Some will, some won't. Those like the woman referenced who did a postgrad course at Cambridge will get high flying jobs and be a fantastic asset for the country. Those that some of us have referenced who can't pass basic English tests, are at very low calibre unis doing low calibre courses or are involved in the systematic cheating that takes place on university assessments may well chance their arm (they wouldn't get a decent grad job anyway). It's a mixed issue.
Do you know what the responsibilities of the employers are regarding employees without valid visas, and therefore the penalties they can face?
How many is "plenty"?
I was being facetious with the picking vegetables, a job I've done myself, because we can't get enough people to do it
An anecdote - last year my dentist had to go back to Malaysia after his post-grad working visa ran out. He had come over to train in Dundee, despite numerous attempts to renew he was told to leave. That practice was pretty much the last in the city that took on NHS patients. Since he left they have been unable to find a replacement and are no longer taking on any NHS patients.
No one is getting a graduate job if their visa has run out. A skilled worker visa means earning £26k+ (or £21k+ for recent grads under 26 years old), and having a job in one of these categories:Paddington Bear wrote: ↑Wed May 24, 2023 12:58 pmSome will, some won't. Those like the woman referenced who did a postgrad course at Cambridge will get high flying jobs and be a fantastic asset for the country. Those that some of us have referenced who can't pass basic English tests, are at very low calibre unis doing low calibre courses or are involved in the systematic cheating that takes place on university assessments may well chance their arm (they wouldn't get a decent grad job anyway). It's a mixed issue.Tichtheid wrote: ↑Wed May 24, 2023 12:52 pmPaddington Bear wrote: ↑Wed May 24, 2023 12:22 pm
They're not planning on going home. I don't blame them, I'd do exactly the same. But again, let's be honest about what we're dealing with here and not pretend it is some cost-free win/win.
Do you know how difficult it is to get a graduate level job in the UK after a visa runs out?
Unless these folk are going to rack up a >fifty grand debt in order to pick sprouts in a field over the winter they are going to find it difficult to find work
https://www.gov.uk/government/publicati ... -and-codes
Perfectly possible that someone in your second category (didn't go to a top uni cannot speak English), finds a job as a "garage manager" (it's on the list) and sits behind the till 24/7 therefore qualifying for a skilled worker visa. Whilst the person in your first category (Cambridge post grad probably older than 26) struggles to find work they're actually willing to do and ends up struggling to meet the visa requirements on earnings.
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I don't doubt the story at all - as with a lot of things this country tends to penalise those of us who play by the rules and fail to enforce the rules on those that don't. It's like watching Ireland get reffed at the breakdown.Tichtheid wrote: ↑Wed May 24, 2023 1:14 pmPaddington Bear wrote: ↑Wed May 24, 2023 1:06 pmWouldn't make it my specialist subject on mastermind but I understand it is reasonably onerous. You gave an example of work that might fall outside of this, there are plenty of others and plenty of people willing to exploit/take advantage of those who think living here illegally is better than going home. Your point is a bit of a 'no one drink drives/dodges taxes, it's illegal' style one.
How many is "plenty"?
I was being facetious with the picking vegetables, a job I've done myself, because we can't get enough people to do it
An anecdote - last year my dentist had to go back to Malaysia after his post-grad working visa ran out. He had come over to train in Dundee, despite numerous attempts to renew he was told to leave. That practice was pretty much the last in the city that took on NHS patients. Since he left they have been unable to find a replacement and are no longer taking on any NHS patients.
Old men forget: yet all shall be forgot, But he'll remember with advantages, What feats he did that day
It's one of those issues where it's pretty difficult to know what the reality actually is.
I can only speak from a Scotland and Africa perspective, but some of the largest wages being paid now at Scottish uni's are in student recruitment, and the budgets they have are huge. I don't know the figures on dependent visas up here but in my experience the majority of Nigerian students head for Aberdeen or RGU and are studying degrees in energy/o&g with a view to going home for experience before looking at the international job market. The only one's that seem to bring anyone with them are older post graduate folk.
It does stink a bit to be honest. A huge issue across Africa at the moment is 100,000's of graduates sitting at home with a degree and no chance of getting a job. We sell a dream to get the cash then they are cast aside. It's got to the stage where some governments in Africa are actively trying to downgrade the status of a degree to get these kids into more practical courses. But the relentless push for graduates paying massive fees continues from the uni's in full knowledge of this. It's a business I suppose. Almost weekly I get requests from contacts asking if I can find help for a student who has been accepted on a course but has no way of paying for themselves. As an aside, I also met a student recruiter from Nigeria employed by a Scottish university who had placed over 300 students in a year. She flew over First Class and was dripping in Dior, I'm not convinced many questions are being asked.
The other issue of course is that Scottish students are missing out on places, but that's another conversation.
I can only speak from a Scotland and Africa perspective, but some of the largest wages being paid now at Scottish uni's are in student recruitment, and the budgets they have are huge. I don't know the figures on dependent visas up here but in my experience the majority of Nigerian students head for Aberdeen or RGU and are studying degrees in energy/o&g with a view to going home for experience before looking at the international job market. The only one's that seem to bring anyone with them are older post graduate folk.
It does stink a bit to be honest. A huge issue across Africa at the moment is 100,000's of graduates sitting at home with a degree and no chance of getting a job. We sell a dream to get the cash then they are cast aside. It's got to the stage where some governments in Africa are actively trying to downgrade the status of a degree to get these kids into more practical courses. But the relentless push for graduates paying massive fees continues from the uni's in full knowledge of this. It's a business I suppose. Almost weekly I get requests from contacts asking if I can find help for a student who has been accepted on a course but has no way of paying for themselves. As an aside, I also met a student recruiter from Nigeria employed by a Scottish university who had placed over 300 students in a year. She flew over First Class and was dripping in Dior, I'm not convinced many questions are being asked.
The other issue of course is that Scottish students are missing out on places, but that's another conversation.
All the money you made will never buy back your soul
It's going a bit off topic, but it's a deep cultural issue and will not be changed easily.Slick wrote: ↑Wed May 24, 2023 2:05 pm It's one of those issues where it's pretty difficult to know what the reality actually is.
I can only speak from a Scotland and Africa perspective, but some of the largest wages being paid now at Scottish uni's are in student recruitment, and the budgets they have are huge. I don't know the figures on dependent visas up here but in my experience the majority of Nigerian students head for Aberdeen or RGU and are studying degrees in energy/o&g with a view to going home for experience before looking at the international job market. The only one's that seem to bring anyone with them are older post graduate folk.
It does stink a bit to be honest. A huge issue across Africa at the moment is 100,000's of graduates sitting at home with a degree and no chance of getting a job. We sell a dream to get the cash then they are cast aside. It's got to the stage where some governments in Africa are actively trying to downgrade the status of a degree to get these kids into more practical courses. But the relentless push for graduates paying massive fees continues from the uni's in full knowledge of this. It's a business I suppose. Almost weekly I get requests from contacts asking if I can find help for a student who has been accepted on a course but has no way of paying for themselves. As an aside, I also met a student recruiter from Nigeria employed by a Scottish university who had placed over 300 students in a year. She flew over First Class and was dripping in Dior, I'm not convinced many questions are being asked.
The other issue of course is that Scottish students are missing out on places, but that's another conversation.
There needs to be a culture in the country that's parochial enough for the elites to prize going to uni in the country over going abroad. In Africa only SA has done this (and very maybe Egypt). In SA going abroad to some place exceptional will be held in some regard, but UCT/Wits/Stellies are all still rated very highly, as will technical qualifications from a range of other SA unis. No many are going to think really quite good unis in the UK (Bristol or Bath or somewhere like that) are better than SA's best. Without this narrowmindedness a country's uni system will be shit. Not just an African thing either, SA has better or at the very least as good unis as Taiwan/Vietnam/Philippines/Indonesia/Malaysia/Thailand/Bangladesh/Sri Lanka/Pakistan. SA usually has 3 or 4 unis better than whatever most Asia countries are putting up, SA's top uni is usually far above whatever the best from India is. It's not an economic development thing, it's not a cultural "focus on education" thing either (the focus on education in SA is not above Taiwanese ethnic Chinese or South Asians) it really just is "where are your elites going because that's where everyone else will want to go, and will be the place you invest in and help build". A lot of countries in Africa and Asia have a shit local uni system when they shouldn't, and will until their elites give up on the West in a more fundamental way than they have to date. It's not even like top SA unis are hard to beat, they're often dysfunctional, they just need to become as parochial as us.
This came up on the other forum when the UK pulled out of Erasmus, some goon started praising the unis of Malaysia/Indonesia/Philippines or some equally mad list of Asian countries, above what Europe could offer. Purely based on economic growth and population sizes. I pointed out it would be difficult to get better value for money than at a European uni, and all the places he listed were so bad any English person going there would get an inferior education than if they went to any of about 4 to 8 SA unis. The point they were trying to make, that Europe/Erasmus could be replaced with Asia, didn't really work.
- Paddington Bear
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Some good news:
The UK is set to win a battle with Spain to host a multi-billion-pound electric car battery plant in Somerset, the BBC understands
The boss of Jaguar Land Rover-owner Tata is expected to fly to London next week to finalise the deal.
Some in the car industry have described the plant as the most significant investment in UK automotive since Nissan came to Britain in the 1980s.
Tata's chairman is scheduled to meet the prime minister mid-next week.
Sources familiar with the matter say that although the deal has yet to be signed, engagement has moved from negotiations to drafting and choreography of how the landmark agreement will be presented.
Up to 9,000 jobs would be created at the Bridgwater site, close to the M5.
Old men forget: yet all shall be forgot, But he'll remember with advantages, What feats he did that day
- Insane_Homer
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fixed for accuracyPaddington Bear wrote: ↑Wed May 24, 2023 3:24 pm Some good news:The boss of Jaguar Land Rover-owner Tata is expected to fly to London next week to collect his bribe.
“Facts are meaningless. You could use facts to prove anything that's even remotely true.”
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I'll believe it when those involved have signed on the dotted line, but if it comes through it is very good news.Paddington Bear wrote: ↑Wed May 24, 2023 3:24 pm Some good news:The UK is set to win a battle with Spain to host a multi-billion-pound electric car battery plant in Somerset, the BBC understands
The boss of Jaguar Land Rover-owner Tata is expected to fly to London next week to finalise the deal.
Some in the car industry have described the plant as the most significant investment in UK automotive since Nissan came to Britain in the 1980s.
Tata's chairman is scheduled to meet the prime minister mid-next week.
Sources familiar with the matter say that although the deal has yet to be signed, engagement has moved from negotiations to drafting and choreography of how the landmark agreement will be presented.
Up to 9,000 jobs would be created at the Bridgwater site, close to the M5.
How does this play with/against Britishvolt? Is JLR going their own way a factor in Britishvolt's falling over? Seems odd that JLR declined investment in a company in the midlands (i.e. on their doorstep) and have gone instead for Somerset, although subsidies etc obviously playing a role.
- Paddington Bear
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Britishvolt is up in Blyth, no? On the M5 is probably easier for them from that POV, plus existing expertise in and around Swindon?inactionman wrote: ↑Wed May 24, 2023 3:37 pmI'll believe it when those involved have signed on the dotted line, but if it comes through it is very good news.Paddington Bear wrote: ↑Wed May 24, 2023 3:24 pm Some good news:The UK is set to win a battle with Spain to host a multi-billion-pound electric car battery plant in Somerset, the BBC understands
The boss of Jaguar Land Rover-owner Tata is expected to fly to London next week to finalise the deal.
Some in the car industry have described the plant as the most significant investment in UK automotive since Nissan came to Britain in the 1980s.
Tata's chairman is scheduled to meet the prime minister mid-next week.
Sources familiar with the matter say that although the deal has yet to be signed, engagement has moved from negotiations to drafting and choreography of how the landmark agreement will be presented.
Up to 9,000 jobs would be created at the Bridgwater site, close to the M5.
How does this play with/against Britishvolt? Is JLR going their own way a factor in Britishvolt's falling over? Seems odd that JLR declined investment in a company in the midlands (i.e. on their doorstep) and have gone instead for Somerset, although subsidies etc obviously playing a role.
Old men forget: yet all shall be forgot, But he'll remember with advantages, What feats he did that day
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There was talk of BritishVolt building in/near Coventry, wondered if lukewarm reception from JLR et al scuppered that (could just be Blyth was the better site, of course)Paddington Bear wrote: ↑Wed May 24, 2023 4:11 pmBritishvolt is up in Blyth, no? On the M5 is probably easier for them from that POV, plus existing expertise in and around Swindon?inactionman wrote: ↑Wed May 24, 2023 3:37 pmI'll believe it when those involved have signed on the dotted line, but if it comes through it is very good news.
How does this play with/against Britishvolt? Is JLR going their own way a factor in Britishvolt's falling over? Seems odd that JLR declined investment in a company in the midlands (i.e. on their doorstep) and have gone instead for Somerset, although subsidies etc obviously playing a role.
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Now is he doing this just because it's the right thing to do or for other reasons? Still, a good move.
Michael Gove orders probe into Teesworks 'corruption' claims
The government is setting up an independent panel to probe claims of "corruption, wrongdoing and illegality" at the UK's largest industrial zone.
Levelling Up Secretary Michael Gove said he had taken the "exceptional decision" to order the review into claims at the Teesworks site in Redcar.
Labour MPs had raised concerns over the transfer of millions of pounds of public assets to private developers.
Tees Valley Mayor Ben Houchen said he "looked forward" to its outcome.
In a letter to Conservative Mr Houchen, Mr Gove said he was acting on a request from the mayor and had "reflected carefully on the choices available".
He said the "continued allegation of corruption" had posed a "very real risk" to the site, which had "delivered jobs and economic growth".
However he said, although it was not in the National Audit Office's (NAO) remit to investigate the site, he would "welcome" the body to update "its review of the government's funding arrangements".
Full article at https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-tees-65641660
I wonder who will be hand picking the "independent panel" to investigate?tabascoboy wrote: ↑Wed May 24, 2023 4:54 pm Now is he doing this just because it's the right thing to do or for other reasons? Still, a good move.
Michael Gove orders probe into Teesworks 'corruption' claims
The government is setting up an independent panel to probe claims of "corruption, wrongdoing and illegality" at the UK's largest industrial zone.
Levelling Up Secretary Michael Gove said he had taken the "exceptional decision" to order the review into claims at the Teesworks site in Redcar.
Labour MPs had raised concerns over the transfer of millions of pounds of public assets to private developers.
Tees Valley Mayor Ben Houchen said he "looked forward" to its outcome.
In a letter to Conservative Mr Houchen, Mr Gove said he was acting on a request from the mayor and had "reflected carefully on the choices available".
He said the "continued allegation of corruption" had posed a "very real risk" to the site, which had "delivered jobs and economic growth".
However he said, although it was not in the National Audit Office's (NAO) remit to investigate the site, he would "welcome" the body to update "its review of the government's funding arrangements".
Full article at https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-tees-65641660
UK car industry, brexit and electrification is absolutely tragic. Just a horrible own goal after some good work from successive governments. UK had jlr with the ipace and Nissan with leaf and then we decided to kick ourselves as hard as possible in the bollocks. This needed to happen 4 -5 years ago.Paddington Bear wrote: ↑Wed May 24, 2023 3:24 pm Some good news:The UK is set to win a battle with Spain to host a multi-billion-pound electric car battery plant in Somerset, the BBC understands
The boss of Jaguar Land Rover-owner Tata is expected to fly to London next week to finalise the deal.
Some in the car industry have described the plant as the most significant investment in UK automotive since Nissan came to Britain in the 1980s.
Tata's chairman is scheduled to meet the prime minister mid-next week.
Sources familiar with the matter say that although the deal has yet to be signed, engagement has moved from negotiations to drafting and choreography of how the landmark agreement will be presented.
Up to 9,000 jobs would be created at the Bridgwater site, close to the M5.
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Curious the text above omits the eye watering subsidies we are having to offer. Given the size of packages EU been supporting with of late I do hope we're not trying to subsides beyond reason without a meaningful aim on how to link these sites with an actual industrial strategy. But it wouldn't surprise me.petej wrote: ↑Wed May 24, 2023 5:25 pmUK car industry, brexit and electrification is absolutely tragic. Just a horrible own goal after some good work from successive governments. UK had jlr with the ipace and Nissan with leaf and then we decided to kick ourselves as hard as possible in the bollocks. This needed to happen 4 -5 years ago.Paddington Bear wrote: ↑Wed May 24, 2023 3:24 pm Some good news:The UK is set to win a battle with Spain to host a multi-billion-pound electric car battery plant in Somerset, the BBC understands
The boss of Jaguar Land Rover-owner Tata is expected to fly to London next week to finalise the deal.
Some in the car industry have described the plant as the most significant investment in UK automotive since Nissan came to Britain in the 1980s.
Tata's chairman is scheduled to meet the prime minister mid-next week.
Sources familiar with the matter say that although the deal has yet to be signed, engagement has moved from negotiations to drafting and choreography of how the landmark agreement will be presented.
Up to 9,000 jobs would be created at the Bridgwater site, close to the M5.
https://www.ft.com/content/95cfea00-a5a ... 70e827d6e1
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I heard we were coughing up £800 million, but not all for the car side, some of doing the car thing is conditional on funding some of Tata's steel concerns too.TheNatalShark wrote: ↑Thu May 25, 2023 5:53 amCurious the text above omits the eye watering subsidies we are having to offer. Given the size of packages EU been supporting with of late I do hope we're not trying to subsides beyond reason without a meaningful aim on how to link these sites with an actual industrial strategy. But it wouldn't surprise me.petej wrote: ↑Wed May 24, 2023 5:25 pmUK car industry, brexit and electrification is absolutely tragic. Just a horrible own goal after some good work from successive governments. UK had jlr with the ipace and Nissan with leaf and then we decided to kick ourselves as hard as possible in the bollocks. This needed to happen 4 -5 years ago.
https://www.ft.com/content/95cfea00-a5a ... 70e827d6e1
Even then it's not massive, even £800 million isn't a drop stacked alongside US bribes (investment opportunities), but we're setting out with an intent to be small/niche. of course small and niche is what we are, but our attempts will need to be well thought out and as much as possible joined up because inertia will not be our friend. Still, this is the world we wanted with less multilateral cooperation, one's thanks as always to the 52%
- fishfoodie
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Are you forgetting that the only Economist who thought Brexit a good idea, also thought that the eradication of the UK Car industry was the inevitable consequence ?petej wrote: ↑Wed May 24, 2023 5:25 pmUK car industry, brexit and electrification is absolutely tragic. Just a horrible own goal after some good work from successive governments. UK had jlr with the ipace and Nissan with leaf and then we decided to kick ourselves as hard as possible in the bollocks. This needed to happen 4 -5 years ago.Paddington Bear wrote: ↑Wed May 24, 2023 3:24 pm Some good news:The UK is set to win a battle with Spain to host a multi-billion-pound electric car battery plant in Somerset, the BBC understands
The boss of Jaguar Land Rover-owner Tata is expected to fly to London next week to finalise the deal.
Some in the car industry have described the plant as the most significant investment in UK automotive since Nissan came to Britain in the 1980s.
Tata's chairman is scheduled to meet the prime minister mid-next week.
Sources familiar with the matter say that although the deal has yet to be signed, engagement has moved from negotiations to drafting and choreography of how the landmark agreement will be presented.
Up to 9,000 jobs would be created at the Bridgwater site, close to the M5.
He also thought that Farmers were fucked, so he was at least capable of seeing some of the outcomes.
- Paddington Bear
- Posts: 5963
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- Location: Hertfordshire
There's no world in which the Americans are pursuing the economic policies that they are where we wouldn't have to chuck cash at firms to come here/stay. Of course there's a fair few firms who realise that the government is absolutely desperate for a win, hence Musk's recent antics. £800m sounds as you say like a small price to pay, particularly if we can join this up beyond Bridgewater (whilst I won't hold my breath this does strike me as the kind of thing Sunak may be quite tuned into, we'll see).Rhubarb & Custard wrote: ↑Thu May 25, 2023 8:58 amI heard we were coughing up £800 million, but not all for the car side, some of doing the car thing is conditional on funding some of Tata's steel concerns too.TheNatalShark wrote: ↑Thu May 25, 2023 5:53 amCurious the text above omits the eye watering subsidies we are having to offer. Given the size of packages EU been supporting with of late I do hope we're not trying to subsides beyond reason without a meaningful aim on how to link these sites with an actual industrial strategy. But it wouldn't surprise me.petej wrote: ↑Wed May 24, 2023 5:25 pm
UK car industry, brexit and electrification is absolutely tragic. Just a horrible own goal after some good work from successive governments. UK had jlr with the ipace and Nissan with leaf and then we decided to kick ourselves as hard as possible in the bollocks. This needed to happen 4 -5 years ago.
https://www.ft.com/content/95cfea00-a5a ... 70e827d6e1
Even then it's not massive, even £800 million isn't a drop stacked alongside US bribes (investment opportunities), but we're setting out with an intent to be small/niche. of course small and niche is what we are, but our attempts will need to be well thought out and as much as possible joined up because inertia will not be our friend. Still, this is the world we wanted with less multilateral cooperation, one's thanks as always to the 52%
Old men forget: yet all shall be forgot, But he'll remember with advantages, What feats he did that day
The dossier given to Thames Valley Police and the Met about Boris details about 12 illegal events during lockdown at both Chequers and No. 10. None of these have been investigated before.Insane_Homer wrote: ↑Tue May 23, 2023 7:53 pmBoris Johnson has been referred to the police by the Cabinet Office after his diary showed friends visiting Chequers - the grace and favour home - during the COVID pandemic.
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/20 ... ing-street
I wonder if the Met will actually investigate this time now that he is no longer PM rather than ignoring all the evidence as they did last time.
Sunak opposes having a joined up industrial strategy, whilst he was chancellor he saw it at businesses queueing up at his door for "handouts". In 2021 KamiKwazi scrapped Greg Clark's industrial strategy, but Sunak was chancellor and had no issue with the move. This year Sunak abolished the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy, the "industrial strategy" component not finding a new home in the three new ministries that replaced it.Paddington Bear wrote: ↑Thu May 25, 2023 9:07 am £800m sounds as you say like a small price to pay, particularly if we can join this up beyond Bridgewater (whilst I won't hold my breath this does strike me as the kind of thing Sunak may be quite tuned into, we'll see).
Like most Tories his economics is more Truss like than he would now admit. He believes in "letting the market decide", it's almost a religious belief. In a context when all the bigger players than the UK are doing everything they can to distort the market, armed with actual joined up thought through plans and a mountain of resources, whilst all the smaller players than the UK have a cost advantage and sometimes more of a plan than the UK too. The anti-EU stuff comes from the same urge, it only works if everyone else also decides to leave the EU, if they don't and the EU still exists then it doesn't work and risks crippling the UK. If only the UK decides to "let the market decide", then the UK is worse off.
The Tories seem capable of throwing money at this sort of thing, as long as it's not very much money and there's no big plan. If it involves substantial resources and an actual plan they start waffling about "British Leyland" and "picking winners".
Labour are going in the opposite direction and are clearly aiming for as large an industrial strategy as possible. But the electoral system doesn't promote consensus building it favours two completely opposed opposites. In an economy like the UK that's a lot smaller than the big players, this sort of thing isn't going to work if it's not pursued through multiple administrations over the long term.
The Tories promised an industrial strategy in 2010. We're still waiting._Os_ wrote: ↑Thu May 25, 2023 10:05 amSunak opposes having a joined up industrial strategy, whilst he was chancellor he saw it at businesses queueing up at his door for "handouts". In 2021 KamiKwazi scrapped Greg Clark's industrial strategy, but Sunak was chancellor and had no issue with the move. This year Sunak abolished the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy, the "industrial strategy" component not finding a new home in the three new ministries that replaced it.Paddington Bear wrote: ↑Thu May 25, 2023 9:07 am £800m sounds as you say like a small price to pay, particularly if we can join this up beyond Bridgewater (whilst I won't hold my breath this does strike me as the kind of thing Sunak may be quite tuned into, we'll see).
Like most Tories his economics is more Truss like than he would now admit. He believes in "letting the market decide", it's almost a religious belief. In a context when all the bigger players than the UK are doing everything they can to distort the market, armed with actual joined up thought through plans and a mountain of resources, whilst all the smaller players than the UK have a cost advantage and sometimes more of a plan than the UK too. The anti-EU stuff comes from the same urge, it only works if everyone else also decides to leave the EU, if they don't and the EU still exists then it doesn't work and risks crippling the UK. If only the UK decides to "let the market decide", then the UK is worse off.
The Tories seem capable of throwing money at this sort of thing, as long as it's not very much money and there's no big plan. If it involves substantial resources and an actual plan they start waffling about "British Leyland" and "picking winners".
Labour are going in the opposite direction and are clearly aiming for as large an industrial strategy as possible. But the electoral system doesn't promote consensus building it favours two completely opposed opposites. In an economy like the UK that's a lot smaller than the big players, this sort of thing isn't going to work if it's not pursued through multiple administrations over the long term.
And are there two g’s in Bugger Off?
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I wasn't suggesting £800 million to an Indian company was a small price to pay, it's rather a lot, even if for perhaps not very much.Paddington Bear wrote: ↑Thu May 25, 2023 9:07 amThere's no world in which the Americans are pursuing the economic policies that they are where we wouldn't have to chuck cash at firms to come here/stay. Of course there's a fair few firms who realise that the government is absolutely desperate for a win, hence Musk's recent antics. £800m sounds as you say like a small price to pay, particularly if we can join this up beyond Bridgewater (whilst I won't hold my breath this does strike me as the kind of thing Sunak may be quite tuned into, we'll see).Rhubarb & Custard wrote: ↑Thu May 25, 2023 8:58 amI heard we were coughing up £800 million, but not all for the car side, some of doing the car thing is conditional on funding some of Tata's steel concerns too.TheNatalShark wrote: ↑Thu May 25, 2023 5:53 am
Curious the text above omits the eye watering subsidies we are having to offer. Given the size of packages EU been supporting with of late I do hope we're not trying to subsides beyond reason without a meaningful aim on how to link these sites with an actual industrial strategy. But it wouldn't surprise me.
https://www.ft.com/content/95cfea00-a5a ... 70e827d6e1
Even then it's not massive, even £800 million isn't a drop stacked alongside US bribes (investment opportunities), but we're setting out with an intent to be small/niche. of course small and niche is what we are, but our attempts will need to be well thought out and as much as possible joined up because inertia will not be our friend. Still, this is the world we wanted with less multilateral cooperation, one's thanks as always to the 52%
More it's a small piddling sum compared to what's up for grabs in the EU, in China, and especially it would seem with the IRA in the USA
If we get a lot for this £800 million spend to fund a non British company then this in isolation may prove a good idea, though brought to use by this Tory government, a combination of the corrupt and incompetent, I'm not holding my breath. Bigger picture even if this works we're going to need a lot more similar spends, and as ever they're being very opaque about how that's going to happen or even if.
So Braverman and Sunak have been criticised for being dangerous racists by promoting the notion that sexual grooming is predominantly a Pakistani community thing.
My Pakistani mate really hates the shower that is this government because they are clearly anti Pakistani and downright racist cnuts
My Pakistani mate really hates the shower that is this government because they are clearly anti Pakistani and downright racist cnuts
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The £800 figure comes from £300 steel works gov offer (not deemed enough) and £500 initial request car side (with which may go up due to Spain competition).Rhubarb & Custard wrote: ↑Thu May 25, 2023 2:25 pmI wasn't suggesting £800 million to an Indian company was a small price to pay, it's rather a lot, even if for perhaps not very much.Paddington Bear wrote: ↑Thu May 25, 2023 9:07 amThere's no world in which the Americans are pursuing the economic policies that they are where we wouldn't have to chuck cash at firms to come here/stay. Of course there's a fair few firms who realise that the government is absolutely desperate for a win, hence Musk's recent antics. £800m sounds as you say like a small price to pay, particularly if we can join this up beyond Bridgewater (whilst I won't hold my breath this does strike me as the kind of thing Sunak may be quite tuned into, we'll see).Rhubarb & Custard wrote: ↑Thu May 25, 2023 8:58 am
I heard we were coughing up £800 million, but not all for the car side, some of doing the car thing is conditional on funding some of Tata's steel concerns too.
Even then it's not massive, even £800 million isn't a drop stacked alongside US bribes (investment opportunities), but we're setting out with an intent to be small/niche. of course small and niche is what we are, but our attempts will need to be well thought out and as much as possible joined up because inertia will not be our friend. Still, this is the world we wanted with less multilateral cooperation, one's thanks as always to the 52%
More it's a small piddling sum compared to what's up for grabs in the EU, in China, and especially it would seem with the IRA in the USA
If we get a lot for this £800 million spend to fund a non British company then this in isolation may prove a good idea, though brought to use by this Tory government, a combination of the corrupt and incompetent, I'm not holding my breath. Bigger picture even if this works we're going to need a lot more similar spends, and as ever they're being very opaque about how that's going to happen or even if.
Yes, the point is this is a lot if it's just trying to throw at whatever we think can win, rather what purpose it serves complimenting national strategy. Under our mindsets, which are unlikely to change, we're blown out of water by IRA and Green deal. I think we'll be squeezed beyond what EU is as we've seen manufacturers just quote brexit uncertainties even when not valid... and we fold.
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Should have known better and ran a sanctuary for stray cats and donkeys to ensure evacuation.EnergiseR2 wrote: ↑Fri May 26, 2023 6:02 am This is actually profoundly sad that humanity didn't put its hand up https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-65708358
Bet any fucking money in the world if the hotel owner was called Sir Charles Chumlywombly he would have been in the plane with all his monocles
- tabascoboy
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As soon as he got here they'd only try and pack him off to Rwanda most likely...EnergiseR2 wrote: ↑Fri May 26, 2023 6:02 am This is actually profoundly sad that humanity didn't put its hand up https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-65708358
Bet any fucking money in the world if the hotel owner was called Sir Charles Chumlywombly he would have been in the plane with all his monocles
- Hal Jordan
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JLR have completely fucked the pooch over electrification. Nissan hung onto the Leaf way too long, but the new Ariya looks a good product to cram into the ravenous maw of the public's appetite for SUVs.petej wrote: ↑Wed May 24, 2023 5:25 pmUK car industry, brexit and electrification is absolutely tragic. Just a horrible own goal after some good work from successive governments. UK had jlr with the ipace and Nissan with leaf and then we decided to kick ourselves as hard as possible in the bollocks. This needed to happen 4 -5 years ago.Paddington Bear wrote: ↑Wed May 24, 2023 3:24 pm Some good news:The UK is set to win a battle with Spain to host a multi-billion-pound electric car battery plant in Somerset, the BBC understands
The boss of Jaguar Land Rover-owner Tata is expected to fly to London next week to finalise the deal.
Some in the car industry have described the plant as the most significant investment in UK automotive since Nissan came to Britain in the 1980s.
Tata's chairman is scheduled to meet the prime minister mid-next week.
Sources familiar with the matter say that although the deal has yet to be signed, engagement has moved from negotiations to drafting and choreography of how the landmark agreement will be presented.
Up to 9,000 jobs would be created at the Bridgwater site, close to the M5.
But JLR. They had a sporty, if a little flawed, super SUV at a time when the competition was very thin indeed. The Model X, a lardy MPV with a mentalist rocket up its arse, the Audi E-tron and Mercedes EQC didn't come out until a year later, and the Hyundai Kona was around, but a different class altogether.
And they did fuck all with it. They could have stuck the platform under an Evoque type shell and the Chelsea tractor crowd would have been beating down their door.
Now they're titting about with a risible plug in Range Rover and looking utterly clueless.