"I was fortunate enough to be in Edinburgh on the first day of operation. Took this little video... I was with a muggle at the time; he didn't share my excitement..."
(lewistpau)
(Three images: Moschops) |
Link to web site |
"Thomas Piketty thinks the Financial Times knows nothing of his technical work.
[See various earlier posts on this Brent Cross Coalition web site, below.]
"That's the Cliff Notes version of his 4,400-word response to the criticisms the Financial Times leveled against the data in his best-selling book "Capital in the Twenty-First Century." Piketty says that even though he expects people to improve on his work in the future, he still stands by it today, and the mistakes the Financial Times thinks it's found aren't actually mistakes — and that they'd know this if they'd read the appendices he put online.
"... Piketty, in contrast, only uses tax data to generate his British numbers. Now, that data isn't always the best-suited, but it's still better than raw survey results. And it's why Piketty finds that the top 10 percent hold 71 percent of the wealth in Britain, while the survey that Giles touts says it's just 44 percent.
"Ask yourself, as Piketty does, whether you think modern-day Britain is 'one of the most egalitarian countries in history in terms of wealth distribution.' That's what you'd have to believe if you take those survey results at face value."
Link to Shropshire Star |
Link to web site |
Link to "Tax Justice Network" |
Link to web site |
Link to The Guardian |
"We simply cannot take the capitalist system, which produces such plenty and so many solutions, for granted. Prosperity requires not just investment in economic capital, but investment in social capital."
Link to web site |
Link to 'London Office Crane Survey' (PDF) |
The Conference on Inclusive Capitalism: Building Value, Renewing Trust Link"The Conference has been organised by The Initiative for Inclusive Capitalism and the Financial Times.
Link to The Guardian |
"The head of the International Monetary Fund has warned that a persistent violation of ethics among bankers and rising inequality pose a major threat to growth and financial stability.
Christine Lagarde told an audience in London that six years on from the deep financial crisis that engulfed the global economy, banks were resisting reform and still too focused on excessive risk taking to secure their bonuses at the expense of public trust.
She said:
"The behaviour of the financial sector has not changed fundamentally in a number of dimensions since the crisis.
While some changes in behaviour are taking place, these are not deep or broad enough. The industry still prizes short-term profit over long-term prudence, today's bonus over tomorrow's relationship.
Some prominent firms have even been mired in scandals that violate the most basic ethical norms - Libor and foreign exchange rigging, money laundering, illegal foreclosure."
Link to web site |
"Thanks to all of you who wrote to local parties in your area backing the campaign. We will now work hard to support councils across London create safer, more inviting high streets where it’s great to walk.
"Our ‘Six steps to people friendly high streets’ provides local councils in London with practical measures they can now put into motion to make high streets across the capital better places to walk – helping to boost local business, reduce casualties and create more pleasant places to live, work, shop and socialise.
"Over half of local parties have taken our pledge. This breaks down at a party level to:
"You can see exactly who supported the campaign by visiting our campaign map.
- The Lib Dem party supporting in over half of London’s boroughs
- The Green party pledging in every London borough.
- The Labour party supporting in two-fifths of London boroughs
- The Conservative party pledging in a fifth of London boroughs.
"If you would like to know more about our campaign, please visit the campaign pages or email me on tom.platt@livingstreets.org.uk."
Link to web site |
"The Gherkin is a fantastic building, but we can't have that anymore. We can't have those all-glass buildings. We need to be much more responsible."
Link to Evan Davis on web site |
"...To me, this is one big distinction at the heart of the wealth equality debate: whether capital — past accumulation of savings — gets to devour the future, or whether the future is created afresh by each generation.
"This argument is a struggle between those who think riches are created from riches, and those who think riches are created from rags. Are big profits best viewed as a generous return on capital, in the way that worries Piketty? Or as coming from innovation that ultimately benefits us all?
"The answer to that question determines what should be done about inequality. Piketty wants a progressive tax on wealth to prevent high returns entrenching the power of the richest. McCloskey, needless to say, is not keen on redistribution. Taking from today’s rich may give you a one-off uplift in the incomes of the poor of, say 30 per cent, she says; but that is nothing to the uplift from innovation and growth, which can double incomes every generation.
"So much for the central disagreement between them. Here’s my problem. Many people with strong views on inequality consciously or unconsciously think of this as a binary choice: profits go to either a deserving or undeserving rich, depending on your view. It’s all about capital, or all about wealth creation. But I struggle to see it that clearly. I’d like to know how much of the return on capital that so concerns Piketty is actually income earned from entrepreneurial wealth creation. I’d also like to know how important that income is to innovation.
"Piketty is well aware of this vulnerability in his argument. He says:
"The return on capital often inextricably combines elements of true entrepreneurial labour, pure luck and outright theft."
Link to web site and video |
Link to web site |
Link to The Guardian |
"Thomas Piketty has accused the Financial Times of ridiculous and dishonest criticism of his economics book on inequality that has become a publishing sensation.
"The French economist, whose 577-page tome Capital in the Twenty-First Century has become an unlikely must-read for business leaders and politicians alike, said it was ridiculous to suggest that his central thesis on rising inequality was incorrect.
"The controversy blew up when the FT accused Piketty of errors in transcribing numbers, as well as cherry-picking data or not using original sources. The newspaper concluded there was little evidence in Piketty's original sources to bear out his theory that the richest were accumulating more wealth, widening the gap between the haves and the have-nots in Europe and the United States."
Paul Finch, Programme Director, World Architecture FestivalRespondents: [?]
Simon Jenkins, Chairman, National Trust
Nicholas Boys Smith, Director, Create Streets
Tony Travers, Director, LSE London
Rowan Moore, Architecture Critic, The Observer
Nicky Gavron, Chair of the Planning Committee, London Assembly
Link to web site |
"As a self-employed businessman, from generations of entrepreneurs, I am used to being taxed 'till the pips squeak' as a British Chancellor once proudly boasted.
"But even I have never come across such an iniquitous tax as business rates, paid at excruciating and ever-increasing levels on premises which are declining in value, on premises which produce no income at all, and which in my case has seen my income decline by 60pc while my tax has risen by 60pc. I am typical of businesses in the North - or indeed in regions outside London and the South East.
"Businesses have contracted, their employees have been sacked, their returns have fallen off a cliff - but the business rates on their premises have continued to rise as the politicians who presided over the financial collapse force the innocent to pay for their failures.
"Nowhere is the devastation greater than on the High Street where business rates are destroying shop keepers and landlords and the savings of those who have invested in their local communities. The solution to the crisis cannot wait for an overall review of business taxation."
Link to web site |
"It doesn’t mean they won’t continue to be used to some extent for some years to come, but they are likely to be become more marginal. What will do well are the modern shopping centres and retail parks."
Link to Editorial |
Link to web site |
Link to web site |
"House prices in the UK are rising too fast. Latest figures show 8% inflation across the country and double that in the London area. In London, there is already a housing bubble and there could soon be one nationally. This is not healthy. Prices and wages are rising by less than 2% a year. When house prices are going up at four-to-five times the rate of incomes and other prices, danger looms.
We need a healthy market where houses are affordable for first-time buyers, and people can move around the country to find employment or because their circumstances change. Yet affordability ratios are becoming stretched. Finding somewhere to live in the most economically dynamic part of the UK – the London area – is becoming increasingly difficult."
Link to: A brief history of British housing "From 'a land fit for heroes to live in' to the 2000s boom, housebuilding has gone through many peaks and troughs" |
Link to web site of Cllr. Dan Thomas |
Link to web site |
"Allianz Park stadium and sports centre sits in a semi-rural setting, in the middle of Copthall playing fields, in Mill Hill, surrounded by fields, and old hedgerows, miles from anywhere, inaccessible by public transport, approachable only by a manically road humped meandering road: its splendid isolation a perfect venue, in short, for the process of counting the vote for Barnet's council elections.
"We say splendid isolation: in fact the old centre and stadium, long regarded as a white elephant by Barnet Tories, was handed over by them to Saracens rugby club, for a peppercorn rent, and has been tarted up and customised to their specification: the result is an incongrous building, with a shop, and bars, the public one, as Mrs Angry noted with wry amusement on arrival, boasting large windows etched with commendable aspirations to 'honesty', 'humility', and 'discipline'.
"... Another Tory who did not bother staying to hear the declaration was Ansuya Sodha, the former Labour councillor for West Hendon who was deselected, and became so outraged at losing what she had thought was her right to remain a councillor, she defected to the Tory group, when they offered her a nomination.
"Elected instead were three Labour councillors, the redoubtable, wonderful Agnes Slocombe, now the longest serving councillor in Barnet, the hardworking assistant to Andrew Dismore, Adam Langleben, and Mrs Angry's dear friend, the lovely Dr Devra Kay, who is a woman of many parts: Yiddish scholar, jazz singer, and a real delight." [West Hendon is in the same 'Supplementary Planning Guidance' area as Brent Cross.]
Link to web site |
Link to web site |
Link to UK and London "House prices-to-salaries maps which show why you may never get a mortgage" |
Link to 'Not the Barnet Times' |
Link to web site |
"First, the Barnet Eye wishes to send congratulations to Richard Cornelius, the Leader of the Barnet Conservative Party and the Leader of Barnet Council for the next four years, or at least until his colleagues decide to knife him in the back, which is what the Tories usually do after a successful election in Barnet.
"Whilst many of his scheming rivals will be seeking to 'pin the blame' on Mr Cornelius for all manner of disasters (real and imaginary) in their campaign, he has pulled off a stunning victory. The electoral tides are flowing strongly against the Tories, and washed away Hammersmith and Fulham and Croydon Tory administrations.
!For Barnet to hang on is a truly astounding achievement. I believe this to be almost entirely down to Mr Cornelius. This may strike many as a strange thing to say, but I think he is an excellent player of political poker. He had a rotten hand and has had setback after setback since being leader. The greatest of these was the misfortune to have a certain Brian Coleman in his cabinet when he took over."