UK economy crippled by inflation - are high prices here to stay?

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  • Опубликовано: 15 окт 2024
  • Britain has the highest inflation rate in Western Europe. Last month the rising cost of food contributed to a 10.1% inflation rate, only a slight drop from the month before.
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    In the past year, the price of olive oil has gone up by 50%, cheese and eggs over 30% and vegetables 20%.
    This is the sharpest 12-month food price increase since records started in August 1977.
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Комментарии • 2,8 тыс.

  • @Jersderakerguoe
    @Jersderakerguoe 6 месяцев назад +1568

    Inflation hits people a lot harder than a crashing stock or housing market as it directly affects people's cost of living that people immediately feel the impact of. It's not surprising negative market sentiment is so high now. We really need help to survive in this Economy.

    • @GeorgeDean-km3wm
      @GeorgeDean-km3wm 6 месяцев назад +2

      I think I could really use more guidance to navigate the market, it is completely overwhelming, I've liquidated most of my assets and I could really use some advice on what best to invest into.

    • @DorathyJoy
      @DorathyJoy 6 месяцев назад +1

      Your best option if you are unfamiliar with the markets is to seek advice or help from a consultant or investing coach. I know it sounds simple or generic, but talking to a consultant helped me stay afloat in the market and increase my portfolio to roughly 65% since January. For me, it's the best method to enter the market right now.

    • @CraigLloyd-fz6ns
      @CraigLloyd-fz6ns 6 месяцев назад +1

      please who is the consultant that assist you with your investment and if you don't mind, how do I get in touch with them?

    • @DorathyJoy
      @DorathyJoy 6 месяцев назад +1

      'Melissa Terri Swayne is the coach that guides me, you probably might have come across her before I found her through a Newsweek report. She's quite known in her field, look-her up.

  • @DonaldMark-ne7se
    @DonaldMark-ne7se 3 месяца назад +1914

    I'm not kidding when I say that the market crash and high inflation have me really stressed out and worried about retirement. I've been in the red for a while now and although people say these crisis has it perks, I'm losing my mind but I get it Investing is a long-term game, so focus on the long run.

    • @Jamessmith-12
      @Jamessmith-12 3 месяца назад +3

      I can’t focus on the long run when I should be retiring in 3years, you see I’ve got good companies in my portfolio and a good amount invested, but my profit has been stalling, does it mean this recession/unstable market doesn’t provide any calculated risk opportunities to make profit?

    • @JacquelinePerrira
      @JacquelinePerrira 3 месяца назад +3

      There are a lot of strategies to make tongue wetting profit especially in a down market, but such sophisticated trades can only be carried out by proper market experts

    • @kevinmarten
      @kevinmarten 3 месяца назад +1

      I agree, my profit has been consistent no matter the market situation, I got into the market early 2019 and the constant downtrends and losses discouraged me so I sold off, got back in Dec 2020 this time with guidance from an investment adviser that was recommended by a popular economist on a subreddit, long story short, its been 2years now and I’ve gained over $850k following guidance from my investment adviser.

    • @kevinmarten
      @kevinmarten 3 месяца назад +2

      Very true! I've been able to scale from $50K to $189k in this red season because my Financial Advisor figured out Defensive strategies which help portfolios be less vulnerable to market downturns

    • @Jamessmith-12
      @Jamessmith-12 3 месяца назад +2

      I’ve been down a ton, I’m only holding on so I can recoup, I really need help, who is this investment-adviser that guides you?

  • @darnellcapriccioso
    @darnellcapriccioso Год назад +1435

    The FED knows they aren't committed to attacking inflation. They are going to continue to inflate, stocks and commodities will continue to go up with everything else. You can't just sit on cash waiting for a crash, get your money working for you, start buying in slowly and then gradually increase the pace of buying as the prices continue to drop.

    • @richardhudson1243
      @richardhudson1243 Год назад

      Recessions are an inevitable part of the economic cycle, and it is essential to be prepared for them and have a well-structured plan. Having personally entered the workforce during the recession of 2009, I directly witnessed the impact of inflation and learned the significance of generating additional passive income as a countermeasure.

    • @tatianastarcic
      @tatianastarcic Год назад

      @@richardhudson1243 Experienced investors who hold investments for the long-term know that the market and economy tend to recover over time. It's prudent for investors to be prepared for such a resurgence. Personally, I have invested substantially in this unstable market and have earned substantial profits - my portfolio has grown by 65%. I will keep a close eye on the situation for now and gradually increase my stock investments as opportunities present themselves.

    • @maiadazz
      @maiadazz Год назад

      @@tatianastarcic How did you achieve it? I been trying to stick with index funds. I feel this new interest rates hikes could crash this economy. I'm looking out for a better investing strategy, I have a lump sum that inflation is steady eating up.

    • @tatianastarcic
      @tatianastarcic Год назад

      @@maiadazz Having a counselor is essential for portfolio diversification. My advisor is Laurel Dell Sroufe, who is easily searchable and has extensive knowledge of the financial markets.

  • @graywilliams_77.
    @graywilliams_77. Год назад +403

    With inflation in the United States still excessive, most Federal Reserve officials expect to raise interest rates further this year, Chairman Jerome Powell has told a House of Representatives committee.

  • @Paul-eb2cl
    @Paul-eb2cl Год назад +710

    Companies across all sectors, food, energy, and services, report record profits, yet wages remain stagnant. It's easy to work this one out. Yes, rampant profiteering is to blame. European countries are doing better because they regulate their businesses and protect workers' rights.

    • @ecaeas4439
      @ecaeas4439 Год назад +1

      Just comparing the energy price rise between us and France shows how f*cked it is. We could've kept our prices that low if the government acted, but tories gonna be tories and make everyone who isn't disgustingly rich suffer just so the disgustingly rich section of society can make even more money.

    • @Whizzy-jx3qe
      @Whizzy-jx3qe Год назад +29

      It’s costing more to produce the product an example fertiliser’s costing over £1000 per ton two yrs ago it was £600 thus pushing up bread,cheese,butter and butter spreads,milk and other dairy products. Also the cost of bringing product into the uk due to Brexit.

    • @SDC-
      @SDC- Год назад +39

      Spot on Paul, we are being ripped off as usual

    • @WhichDoctor1
      @WhichDoctor1 Год назад +38

      Well then, we’re are the increased profits coming from? No one’s claiming that the costs of raw materials and transport hasn’t gone up. But if that was all the profits would be the same as before if not squeezed. They’re not, profits are going up at the same time as workers are being told there’s no money to give them an inflation matching pay rise. There is enough money to give shareholders inflation busting dividends though

    • @PGHEngineer
      @PGHEngineer Год назад +2

      The private sector got an average wage increase of 6%.
      Not all your costs went up by 10%.

  • @AbhineetAsthana13
    @AbhineetAsthana13 Год назад +300

    “I hope I live to see the day when it goes down again”. Damn that hit hard right in the feels.

    • @full__tilt
      @full__tilt Год назад +5

      This is project fear

    • @frixosfriedman7813
      @frixosfriedman7813 Год назад +17

      Inflation going down isn the same as prices going down. Inflation is just a measure of the rate that prices are increasing. For prices to come down there would have to be inflation in negative numbers.

    • @rutrakainmeiez5107
      @rutrakainmeiez5107 Год назад +10

      It's all rigged

    • @ashroskell
      @ashroskell Год назад +11

      Me too. I’m a middlingly wealthy man, by any reasonable measure, and even I can see quite plainly that we’re NOT, “all in this together.” Doubling food prices is an annoyance to people like me, sometimes it’s quite frankly frustrating. But, I’ve just recently witnessed a friend burst into tears because I paid for a her shopping when we met in the supermarket, because she couldn’t face the, “shame,” of going to a food bank, but knew she would do it, for her kids. I’m getting that in the, “feels,” alright. This government is just too far gone. Degenerate and unfit. Why can’t we force an election? Something has to give?

    • @ashroskell
      @ashroskell Год назад +2

      @@frixosfriedman7813 : Well, this is why it’s so complex and tricky, but they always pull the same levers. Raising interest rates will raise rents and house prices. Especially since the, “government,” has just confessed that it’s not even going to try to build the 30,000 new houses they planned; mostly because of NIMBYism. I own several properties, but live in Scotland where the, “Rent Freeze,” is still in effect and I’m glad of it! The bottom line is NEVER fall for the LIE that, “there is no money,” or the question, “So, where will the money come from?” Because the answer is obvious to anyone who isn’t a Westminster Lobbyist (which includes roughly half of the property owning Mp’s): We’ll take it from all those fat cat subsidies, the energy and transport companies (who offered to pay a windfall tax, btw!) and the banks that were lyingly purported to be, “too big to fail.” And that’s just for starters. The money is there. It’s just in the wrong hands.

  • @paxundpeace9970
    @paxundpeace9970 Год назад +341

    19% inflation at food prices it is ridiculous

    • @ecaeas4439
      @ecaeas4439 Год назад +1

      I guess that's what happens when you let Energy companies get away with robbing the sh*t out of producers and consumers

    • @Zaarin2007
      @Zaarin2007 Год назад +37

      Its brexit

    • @williampatrickfagan7590
      @williampatrickfagan7590 Год назад +59

      @@Zaarin2007 May I correct your spelling?
      It's Brexshit.

    • @guff9567
      @guff9567 Год назад +16

      40%

    • @phil3038
      @phil3038 Год назад +22

      this is the first time ive really noticed inflation, expecially food costs. £4 for a small bottle of Heinz salad cream! 😮😮😂

  • @talented009
    @talented009 Год назад +647

    With inflation running at a four-decade high, the Recession is now the ‘most likely outcome for the economy and I cannot imagine being a victim of circumstances. My portfolio suffered a big hit, holding it further won’t be any good. I've heard of people netting hundreds of thousands this red season. How can I ensure this?

    • @Adukwulukman859
      @Adukwulukman859 Год назад

      I agree with you. I overheard someone talking about how a couple made $200k during this red season but it’s risky except you’re being guided by a pro.

    • @ThomasHeintz
      @ThomasHeintz Год назад

      True, the idea of a portfolio-coach used to sound generic, but a new study by investopedia actually found that demand for portfolio-coaches sky-rocketed by over 41.8% since the pandemic and based on firsthand encounters, I can say for certain their skillsets are topnotch, I've raised over $700k from an initially stagnant reserve of $150K all within 14months.

    • @DarleneMurphy774
      @DarleneMurphy774 Год назад

      @@ThomasHeintz I need guidance so i can salvage my portfolio due to the massive dips and come up with better strategies. How can i reach this advsor?

    • @ThomasHeintz
      @ThomasHeintz Год назад

      @@DarleneMurphy774 The advisor I use is actually quite known, you might have heard of her, Laura Marie Ray, she's been featured on several platforms including CNBC and Bloomberg, you can search her name.

    • @esther.74
      @esther.74 Год назад

      @@ThomasHeintz I just looked up Laura Marie Ray online and researched her accreditation. She seem very proficient, I wrote her detailing my Fin-market goals.

  • @BrainKeener
    @BrainKeener Год назад +1114

    Considering the prevailing inflationary conditions, it appears improbable that the stock and housing market will register substantial gains in the immediate future. Therefore, it is advisable to temper one's expectations and acknowledge the potential length of the market's recovery period. It is my professional opinion that it would be prudent to defer any significant investment decisions until the economic environment stabilizes in areas of concern. Until then, exercising caution and refraining from engaging with the current turbulence would be the most judicious course of action.

    • @duane_29
      @duane_29 Год назад +1

      Focus on two key objectives. First, stay protected by learning when to buy and sell stocks to cut losses and capture profits. Second, prepare to profit when the market turns around.

    • @DavidRiggs-dc7jk
      @DavidRiggs-dc7jk Год назад +1

      A steadfast commitment to reputable companies requires either holding steady during market downturns or increasing investments during such times. This strategy is based on the fundamental belief that well-managed enterprises will eventually rebound with renewed strength. On the other hand, investors seeking long-term profits through stock appreciation should seek guidance from a FA to identify opportune entry and exit points. My own experience during the pandemic highlights the value of working with an investment advisor, which resulted in a significant gain of $630k in just 8 months.

    • @berkrix4312
      @berkrix4312 Год назад

      @@DavidRiggs-dc7jk Please can you leave the info of your investment advisor here? I’m in dire need for one.

    • @berkrix4312
      @berkrix4312 Год назад +1

      @@DavidRiggs-dc7jk thank you for this tip , I must say Christine , appears to be quite knowledgeable. After coming across her online page, I thoroughly went through her resume, and I must say, it was quite impressive. I reached out to her, and I have booked a session with her.

    • @dimsumbay
      @dimsumbay Год назад

      Hey! Can someone help me here? Is it a good time for international students to enter the UK? I've been putting this on hold for the past 2 years. I'd hopefully like to work in the UK also, but the economic state frightens me!

  • @3rodox
    @3rodox Год назад +159

    Doesn't matter. The rich are getting richer, that's all that matters in the UK.

    • @sunflowers33
      @sunflowers33 Год назад

      Well the government is only for the rich boarding school graduate tax avoidance wife it disgusting

    • @basicinfo8786
      @basicinfo8786 Год назад +13

      They should put them in court for high treason but instead they give them lord seats in the parliament

    • @hassanbhai-ds6hf
      @hassanbhai-ds6hf Год назад

      Yet people who claim benefits and use food banks are the problem, 😂
      Aslong as I live I will never work in the UK because if your working class your just a slave to the scum in parliament, and I damn sure won't respect a government that doesn't respect it's people 💯

    • @BasicIslamTV
      @BasicIslamTV Год назад

      Hang Indian pm

    • @petir2008
      @petir2008 Год назад +3

      you want capitalism, you get capitalism

  • @Natalieneptune469
    @Natalieneptune469 Год назад +282

    The financial system has been artificially pumped for over a decade to ensure big pockets were lined; and now those same hands will make a fortune in the largest transfer of wealth in human history by shorting it on the way down. Inflation does have a roll, but that's to keep everyone panicked, and focused on their bills and expenses, rather than focus on the capital crimes of politicians and corporations,I'm still at a crossroads deciding if to liquidate my $338k stock portfolio, what’s the best way to take advantage of this bear market??

    • @PhilipMurray251
      @PhilipMurray251 Год назад

      Find stocks with yields that exceed the market and stocks that, at the very least, follow the long-term market trend. However, you should get guidance from a financial advisor if you want to create a successful long-term plan...

    • @Alejandracamacho357
      @Alejandracamacho357 Год назад +2

      I agree, I've been in constant touch with an Investment advisor for approximately 17 months. These days, it's really easy to buy into trending stocks, but the task is determining when to sell or hold. That's where my advisor comes in, to help me with entry and exit points , I've accrued over $337k from an initially stagnant reserve of $148K all within 18 months.

    • @Natalieneptune469
      @Natalieneptune469 Год назад

      @@Alejandracamacho357 I need a guide so i can salvage my port-folio due to the massive dips and come up with better strategies. How can one reach this advisor??

    • @Alejandracamacho357
      @Alejandracamacho357 Год назад +5

      ​@@Natalieneptune469 Having an advisor is essential for portfolio diversification. My advisor is DEBORAH SUE BOHN who is easily searchable and has extensive knowledge of the financial markets...

    • @instinctively_awesome8283
      @instinctively_awesome8283 Год назад

      @@Alejandracamacho357 Thank you for this amazing tip. I just looked the name up, wrote her and scheduled a call...

  • @SubjectiveFunny
    @SubjectiveFunny Год назад +177

    The UK is truly doomed..
    I don't know how we will get out of this, prices will never come down, they will only slow..
    We are in some SERIOUS trouble...

    • @ecaeas4439
      @ecaeas4439 Год назад +32

      Tax the energy companies would be a start. Re-nationalising would be a huge step in fixing it as well.

    • @abhi739
      @abhi739 Год назад +2

      @@ecaeas4439 if u do that they will increase gas prices further. They can be encouraged to invest in green hydrogen production in 50-50 partnership with uk govt. Job potential is big

    • @Kaizen917
      @Kaizen917 Год назад

      @@ecaeas4439 People could end up footing some serious bill with nationalized companies. It just doesnt get paid through bills per se but via higher overal taxation. And where the UK stands now, it will cost even more in the short term before it might help eventually (and even thats a big "if").

    • @ecaeas4439
      @ecaeas4439 Год назад +5

      @Kaizen917 Not true. For one, the UK has the option of conducting a wealth tax to raise billions which could support re-nationalisation. A wealth tax could take many forms, but there are many proposals for closing tax loopholes or matching the rates of higher individual taxes paid in other countries (for example capital gains tax) which have already been explored and have real potential to raise billions of annual revenue (not just one off amounts).
      Besides that, it's worth looking at the fact that since 2010, energy companies have paid out £200 billion in dividends to their shareholders. That's literally money from businesses and people in the UK which isn't going into maintaining / upgrading the grid or building new power generators. Consider from that perspective that money is unnecessarily being drained out of the economy on utilities, and it isn't actually providing any purported benefit of a privatised model, such as higher capital investment. For God's sake... I mean we had to literally bring in EDF to build this country a new nuclear power plant and besides already profiteering from British households & businesses to allow them to keep the costs of French energy low (much like the rail situation), we're still paying for it via taxpayer money. The energy companies only invest 5% of the money they make into investment, which goes some way in explaining why almost every other country with a nationalised energy provider has more investment in energy infrastructure than we do.

    • @jameschamberlain5817
      @jameschamberlain5817 Год назад +1

      @@ecaeas4439 "Since 2010 energy companies have paid out dividends to shareholders"
      In 2010, as we all know, the Tories took the seats.
      In reflection to what you said about taxing wealth. It would fundamentally be a great way of sorting things out, but let's be real here. That's not going to happen whilst the Tories are at the helm. I think it's fair to say that Rishi and his mates are making a small fortune from this too..

  • @shellylofgren
    @shellylofgren Год назад +911

    A number of the most eminent market experts have been expressing their views on the severity of the impending economic downturn and the extent to which equities might plummet. This is because the economy is heading towards a recession and inflation is persistently above the Federal Reserve's 2% target. As I'm aiming to create a portfolio worth no less than $850,000 before I turn 65, I would appreciate any advice on potential investments.

    • @jeffery_Automotive
      @jeffery_Automotive Год назад +4

      There are many other interesting stocks in many industries that you might follow. You don't have to act on every forecast, so I'll suggest that you work with a financial advisor who can help you choose the best times to purchase and sell the shares or ETFs you want to acquire.

    • @georgebarret
      @georgebarret Год назад +3

      I've been in touch with a financial advisor ever since I started my business. Knowing today's culture The challenge is knowing when to purchase or sell when investing in trending stocks, which is pretty simple. On my portfolio, which has grown over $900k in a little over a year, my adviser chooses entry and exit orders.

    • @HarrietBemish
      @HarrietBemish Год назад +3

      @@georgebarret That's impressive, my portfolio have been tanking all year, tried learning new strategies to gain in the current market but all of that flew right over head, please would you mind recommending the invt-adviser you're using?

    • @georgebarret
      @georgebarret Год назад +3

      I thoroughly recommend Julie Anne Hoover, an investment advisor who is subject to US SEC regulation. She has assisted me with my portfolio for many years. Look her up online; she's a well-known figure.

    • @HarrietBemish
      @HarrietBemish Год назад +2

      @@georgebarret She appears to be well-educated and well-read. I ran a Google search on her name and came across her website; thank you for sharing.

  • @victorlaranjahal
    @victorlaranjahal Год назад +1448

    What has always scared me the most about the inflation is that we might go into a very bad recession, and that would greatly affect the market. I have been able to accrue up to $293k, and I'm worried about a possible wipe-out from the inflation. I read of someone who's been making more than $23k every month despite this recession. Can I pull that off as a novice?

    • @stephenpotter21
      @stephenpotter21 Год назад +4

      Investing in the market, even if it's just the S&P 500, can keep up with inflation, because the growth rate of stocks will always exceed the inflation rate. But if you don't have the courage, you could just invest with a financial advisor, which even has greater return on investments, while securing your investment against losses.

    • @ericmendels
      @ericmendels Год назад +2

      For real, people underestimate how much they can rake in from the stock market. Started with $127k just before the pandemic hit. Many people's portfolios tanked, but I rode through with my financial advisor, and even made more than $86k within just five months of starting, and it's been an awesome ride since then.

    • @cloudyblaze7916
      @cloudyblaze7916 Год назад +1

      @@ericmendels Do you happen to know any advisor, please? I need someone who has a reliable track record, because I want to transfer my existing portfolio and start one for my wife.

    • @ericmendels
      @ericmendels Год назад

      I don't really love making recommendations such as this, but I know SHARON LOUISE COUNT does that as part of her services. She's a fellow financial advisor, but I work with hedge funds, not individuals.

    • @gregorywhem
      @gregorywhem Год назад

      @@ericmendels Thanks a lot! Definitely gonna check her out. I have an existing portfolio. Do you think she could help me manage that? I've been in the red for a while now.

  • @arisdavid8193
    @arisdavid8193 Год назад +94

    UK inflation rate: 10.1%
    Eurozone Inflation rate: 6.9%
    US Inflation rate: 5%
    Canada Inflation rate: 4.3%
    Russia Inflation rate: 3.5%
    Source: Trading Economics and ONS

    • @paxundpeace9970
      @paxundpeace9970 Год назад +19

      @@Derek-Trotter 6.9% facts don't change

    • @joaquindiaz4730
      @joaquindiaz4730 Год назад +4

      Rusia IS 35% at least

    • @kayoss11
      @kayoss11 Год назад +9

      Zimbabwe 204.6%
      🇻🇪 Venezuela 195.0%
      🇸🇩 Sudan 76.9%
      🇦🇷 Argentina 76.1%
      🇹🇷 Turkiye 51.2%
      🇮🇷 Islamic Republic of Iran 40.0%
      🇱🇰 Sri Lanka 29.5%
      🇪🇹 Ethiopia 28.6%
      🇸🇷 Suriname 27.2%
      🇸🇱 Sierra Leone 26.8%
      You think we got it bad.

    • @joaquindiaz4730
      @joaquindiaz4730 Год назад +30

      @@kayoss11 you compare UK with third world countries ?

    • @kayoss11
      @kayoss11 Год назад

      @@joaquindiaz4730 So.

  • @vixxa1719
    @vixxa1719 Год назад +207

    Wow the uk finally is the highest at something

  • @Blazegraze12
    @Blazegraze12 Год назад +139

    Correct me if I'm wrong but weren't we meant to be financially better off now that we are no longer part of the EU? 😕

    • @TheChrisEMartin
      @TheChrisEMartin Год назад +5

      But 12 EU countries have worse inflation than UK. In Hungary it is double rate in UK. This is a big problem especially in new central european countries.

    • @sydneylaroche8276
      @sydneylaroche8276 Год назад +6

      Inflation is not prices, Estonia's inflation was the highest last summer at 25 percent now down to 15 percent, and prices have slowly followed. In the UK the prices haven't come down with inflation.

    • @weird-guy
      @weird-guy Год назад +6

      First those countries spend more in necessities than the uk, second the inflation in other countries is decreasing meaning the prices stay high but dont increase more,in the UK inflation is rising meaning you guys gone see even more price increases.

    • @hamzabayram3501
      @hamzabayram3501 Год назад +21

      Has UK fallen that much to compare itself with Estonia and similar countries? Historically we were comparing ourselves with Germany and France.

    • @sydneylaroche8276
      @sydneylaroche8276 Год назад +3

      @@hamzabayram3501 partially yes, but it's also worth noting a lot of east European countries have been experiencing over 20 years of high growth rates, so it's just as much to do with them improving as it is the UK declining.

  • @ishadowmarshall282
    @ishadowmarshall282 Год назад +54

    It's the mark of us British even when things are not going our way, we stubbornly presume that things are looking good, even when people are paying more than what they are used to.
    This blindness is much more alarming than anything they will offer.

    • @ilikelampshades6
      @ilikelampshades6 Год назад

      and people will STILL vote for conservatives despite every single thing in the country taking a nose dive since they came to power

    • @Kikiconsilience
      @Kikiconsilience Год назад

      Because it’s the superiority complex. Brits can never admit that UK is turning into a 💩 hole

    • @barkobummer
      @barkobummer Год назад

      damm right, and guess what, the g0vt and wealthy feudal class know it too, hence they will never stop sucking the lives out of the ordinary british plebs still worshipping a german royal family LOL

  • @jimmy7434
    @jimmy7434 Год назад +6

    Being alive is expensive. I’m not even having a good time.

  • @bluegoose7832
    @bluegoose7832 Год назад +128

    Bread doubling in price is borderline theft considering traditional bread is made with just 3 very common ingredients...

    • @drunkensailor112
      @drunkensailor112 Год назад +16

      And how do you think the bread magically appears in the shop?

    • @bluegoose7832
      @bluegoose7832 Год назад +16

      ​@drunkensailor112 manufacturing, packaging and transporting hundreds of loaves of bread at a time doesn't cost that much. Certainly not enough to justify doubling it's retail price.
      It costs pennies to make, and if calculated per loaf, it also costs pennies to package and transport. Also most supermarkets have their own bakeries yet bread from there is even more expensive for no reason.

    • @Mkoivuka
      @Mkoivuka Год назад +1

      @@bluegoose7832 But those steps, especially logistics, are completely irrelevant to what you're transporting. Bread. Fruits. Tables. Logistics costs have gone up, a slowing global economy makes freight stupid expensive.

    • @PGHEngineer
      @PGHEngineer Год назад +6

      Aldi price for 800g Warburtons loaf is £1.40. Last summer it was about £1.30. I'm wondering where these inflation numbers are coming from.

    • @abhi739
      @abhi739 Год назад

      Because workers wages have gone up. Supply side production has to increase to keep food prices down.

  • @ageoflove1980
    @ageoflove1980 Год назад +174

    Fun fact : The pound in 2015 : 1.42 Euro Now: 1.14 Euro

    • @abhi739
      @abhi739 Год назад +2

      They shud try to control the pounds value artificially then. Limiting its speculation in open market every morning and trading with nations in pound instead of Euro or dollar.

    • @Steven-vo4ee
      @Steven-vo4ee Год назад +10

      @@abhi739 The Chinese method then?…

    • @abhi739
      @abhi739 Год назад

      @@Steven-vo4ee yes it works

    • @justinbarker4813
      @justinbarker4813 Год назад +8

      @@abhi739 All you would do is cripple trade. China can do this to some level bc they are such a large trading force with things people need, and a large enough market to buy into. The UK doing this would just push companies to switch to the equivalent EU business doing a similar thing. The way MOST countries control their currency is through increasing exports, and raising interest rates. So right now the UK is raising rates, but bc the US is stronger economically it means they are able to raise rates faster which suppresses UK competitiveness

    • @ditnooitweer
      @ditnooitweer Год назад +23

      @@justinbarker4813 increasing exports is much easier in a single market. Oh, wait. Nevermind.

  • @rannyorton
    @rannyorton Год назад +367

    According to certain economists, it's possible that the U.S., UK and certain parts of Europe might experience a recession at some point in 2023. Although a global recession, which is characterized by a decline in annual global per capita income, is relatively uncommon due to the faster growth rates of emerging markets like China, in comparison to developed economies. I have pulled out more than $340k from my bank. After all, the FDIC covers only up to $250,000, and the implosion could have bad effect. Looking to invest into the stock market now. Does anyone know how I could go about it?

    • @PhilipMurray251
      @PhilipMurray251 Год назад +4

      Collapse is generous 1st time in our history with a full generation that wasn't taught financial literacy, civics, Google fixes their problems if their parents don't do it for them. Reckoning for participation trophies is incoming.

    • @Robertgriffinne
      @Robertgriffinne Год назад +3

      Ironically, these are the conditions in which life-changing money is made by those who remain calm, patient, and take controlled risks. Volatility goes both ways. The banks are in a big crisis. The market looks very shaky. The bigger the red candles, the bigger the green ones. I have made over $280k in the last 4 months by investing through my FA.

    • @rannyorton
      @rannyorton Год назад +2

      How can I reach this adviser of yours? because I'm seeking for a more effective investment approach on my savings

    • @Robertgriffinne
      @Robertgriffinne Год назад +7

      I personally work with 'Deborah Sue Bohn ''' she covers things like investing, insurance, making sure retirement is well funded, going over tax benefits, ways to have a volatility buffer for investment risk. many things like that. Just take a look at her full name on the internet. She is well known so it shouldn't be hard to find her.

    • @rannyorton
      @rannyorton Год назад +2

      Thank you for this tip. it was easy to find your coach. Did my due diligence on her before scheduling a phone call with her. She seems proficient considering her resume.

  • @danielcaceres9971
    @danielcaceres9971 Год назад +22

    unless corporations are losing money to this (does not seem like it) then this is, indeed, price gauging

    • @sten260
      @sten260 Год назад

      they are just keeping up with inflation, if they lost money they would go bankrupt. so of course to stay alive they have to raise prices like everybody else

    • @MyName-cw4yr
      @MyName-cw4yr Год назад

      A deflationary period would be nice

  • @paulhoskin3286
    @paulhoskin3286 Год назад +65

    We are all being ripped off

    • @luminousfractal420
      @luminousfractal420 Год назад

      No your being trodden back into the mud. Eugenics and eugenicists.

    • @gokulkrishna4011
      @gokulkrishna4011 Год назад

      Don't care

    • @sandygrowler7384
      @sandygrowler7384 Год назад +1

      Nope. The U.K. voted for it.

    • @ecaeas4439
      @ecaeas4439 Год назад +6

      ​@@sandygrowler7384 How? Literally how? How did the UK vote for energy companies to take the p*ss with prices?

    • @CBDB-cu5rt
      @CBDB-cu5rt Год назад +3

      ​@@ecaeas4439 we voted tory over and over, Boris made people stiff..

  • @wiseman0075
    @wiseman0075 Год назад +331

    The difference in inflation rate compared to other countries in Europe is striking .. We are getting poorer at an insane rate..

    • @guff9567
      @guff9567 Год назад +69

      Sorry, but YOU voted for that brexit you love

    • @Colin623
      @Colin623 Год назад +25

      @@guff9567 But there are many countries in the EU with much higher inflation rate than the UK ! Hungary 26%, Latavia 21%, Estonia 18%, Poland 15.9% and so on ! So how does that work out then when they are IN the EU !

    • @michaellabram5980
      @michaellabram5980 Год назад +11

      27 countries in the Eu…Come on….We messed up…

    • @Colin623
      @Colin623 Год назад +7

      @@michaellabram5980 It's not a case of messed up, it's a case of reality, compared to the EU countries as a whole, the UK is smack in the middle....Germany being very similar to the UK..... FACT..going to blame brexit for Germany's inflation as well 🤡

    • @guff9567
      @guff9567 Год назад +12

      @@Colin623 Well. UK has 40%

  • @rocarolan2003
    @rocarolan2003 Год назад +107

    The IMF says the UK is on the right track. ...... Be worried , be very worried. 😂

    • @ricjun3001
      @ricjun3001 Год назад +1

      IMF is working in cohort with USA, his big brother to please his little brother, UK 😅😅😅

    • @simonthomas5367
      @simonthomas5367 Год назад +5

      Yeah, they decided that over a very nice meal of caviar, lobster and steak. The wine was exquisite.

    • @ishadowmarshall282
      @ishadowmarshall282 Год назад +6

      This is very depressing to hear. The IMF is the last organisation you would want to curry support from.

  • @ashishanand4mech
    @ashishanand4mech Год назад +19

    It's a shame all these so called "experts" don't ever mention "profiteering"

    • @Mr11ESSE111
      @Mr11ESSE111 Год назад

      Because they are in same train

    • @sten260
      @sten260 Год назад

      because there is no profiteering dumbo, everybody loses in inflation except people with massive debts like government

    • @meekeverything4937
      @meekeverything4937 Год назад

      Who voted Sunak as a PM... I think our problem is simply we selected wrong PM

    • @ashishanand4mech
      @ashishanand4mech Год назад

      Go on. File your nomination.

    • @mharis4826
      @mharis4826 Год назад

      In my country the Central Bank increases the OPR to curb the inflation. This resulting in higher loan default rate.

  • @MayorSom
    @MayorSom Год назад +2

    Kitty Usher: Balliol College, _University of Oxford_
    Stephanie Flanders: Balliol College _University of Oxford_
    Cathy Newman: Lady Margaret Hall _University Of Oxford_
    🙃

  • @annagettings4675
    @annagettings4675 Год назад +109

    Let's just face it. No matter what may be the cause of the cost rises, the Tory policy is 'As long as the rich stay rich,'.

    • @BillyTheKid-l5j
      @BillyTheKid-l5j Год назад +2

      Wonder if those Labour voters are going to keep the tories in No10 at the next G/E ? 🤣

    • @chichicjw
      @chichicjw Год назад

      It's not just the tories. Whoever runs our country shaft us one way or another. Give the power back to the royals and let's see if they can do any better.

    • @lewis123417
      @lewis123417 Год назад +4

      Still better than labour policy "rather the poor were poorer as long as the rich were less rich"

    • @sten260
      @sten260 Год назад

      the cause for inflation is and has been always been the government, private companies can not create money therefor they can not create inflation

    • @ruzz6552
      @ruzz6552 Год назад +1

      The rich wont be safe if the poorer get poorer...

  • @arnedomi
    @arnedomi Год назад +200

    Funny how 'inflation' just serves as a comfortable euphemism for price gouging.

    • @brianregan6041
      @brianregan6041 Год назад +7

      Thank you!why is no one saying this

    • @MrAvant123
      @MrAvant123 Год назад +8

      Very true or 'greedflation'

    • @boota1979
      @boota1979 Год назад +3

      @Miguel Arnedo It's price gouging on an epic level!!! Not to mention the wealth transfer from our country, which is nothing short of criminal!!!

    • @dibdab101
      @dibdab101 Год назад +2

      yep...funny how it hits the basics like food, petrol, heating the most....having said that, I'm not sure what the inflation is on new heated swimming pools. Maybe Rishi can enlighten us. I feel his pain 😆

    • @Trebor74
      @Trebor74 Год назад +1

      Look at Tesco and their "Clubcard prices", blatant rip off. One of the problems is the lack of real competition

  • @thesaltbaron-du6mo
    @thesaltbaron-du6mo Год назад +120

    We need to cut wages for nurses again, that should fix it 😂😂😂

    • @gokulkrishna4011
      @gokulkrishna4011 Год назад +2

      Yes

    • @FreaksSpeaks
      @FreaksSpeaks Год назад +1

      While at it other public sector pension as well

    • @Suve35967
      @Suve35967 Год назад +1

      Can't even afford to stay in a Hotel anymore.....oh wait 🤔.

    • @Trebor74
      @Trebor74 Год назад +2

      Nurses want 10 percent. Then other people want the same. Some consider themselves worth more and demand more. Prices go up as costs increase. Meaning those raised are then worthless and the inflation spiral goes round again

    • @nathanielmiller9089
      @nathanielmiller9089 Год назад +3

      I would love for a member of your family to be placed in critical care so you can see how tragically understaffed the NHS is due to low wages. You might be lucky enough to get an exhausted nurse whose been working 18+ hour shifts! ☺️ but I’m sure you’ll complain even more when the NHS gets privatized and we’re paying US prices for healthcare. Can you afford 1k for an ambulance? 🤔

  • @user-lt7ff1tg9f
    @user-lt7ff1tg9f Год назад +16

    I moved to the UK for family reasons. As a young person, this is disheartening, knowing that I've made long term life decisions to be in a country spirling out of control (in more ways this one). Makes me think that I've traded being here for a lower quality of life than I otherwise could have had.

    • @tonycollyweston6182
      @tonycollyweston6182 Год назад +4

      get out as soon as you can

    • @YOPGaming
      @YOPGaming Год назад +4

      Fr. I’m born and raised English and I am OUT OF HERE as soon as I can with my girlfriend

    • @kynchan3332
      @kynchan3332 Год назад +1

      @@YOPGaming Where were you planning to go with lower inflation?

    • @YOPGaming
      @YOPGaming Год назад +1

      @@kynchan3332 I went to Spain and shopping was far cheaper there. Maybe Spain, maybe france, maybe not even Europe tbh

    • @kynchan3332
      @kynchan3332 Год назад +2

      @@YOPGaming Sounds good to try. There doesn't seem to be much here for young people except paying off debts they didn't create. If I was young I'd definitely be going.

  • @janoginski5557
    @janoginski5557 Год назад +5

    It is largely profiteering by the supermarket stores. I was talking to a worker In Tesco the other morning about the price rises in the store, she expressly told me that there was no supply problem at all & they were repricing 100 items a day in the store.
    Inflation is essentially yet another tax.

  • @n.h187
    @n.h187 Год назад +91

    Thank you to the 51% that voted to introduce economic sanctions to the country.

    • @joakimtag7820
      @joakimtag7820 Год назад +5

      France was never more richer than today 🎉 They selling energy to UK, Paris is became the biggest Financial place than London and every european capitales. French workers makes more money than british workers but have lower energy prices ( +11% in France for energy against +175% in UK ) and lower flat rent prices ( 1100€/month in Paris center against 2990€/month for london center )

    • @solrosenberg4529
      @solrosenberg4529 Год назад

      And all those that support Ukraine and the sanctioning of Russia.

    • @ilikelampshades6
      @ilikelampshades6 Год назад

      People stupidly vote Conservatives. If Labour were a serious party we wouldn't be in this mess but instead labour want more immigration so I'll never vote for them despite being left wing

    • @barkobummer
      @barkobummer Год назад

      THAT my friend is the power of state propaganda.
      The plebs bought it and they shall pay the price for believing in g0vt lies.
      The feudal class will be unaffected of course.

  • @willalm830
    @willalm830 Год назад +36

    Say it 3 times to stress the point.................................BREXIT BREXIT BREXIT = Johnson = Tories

  • @Steven-vo4ee
    @Steven-vo4ee Год назад +17

    "It's got nothing to do with Brexit" chant the cultists.

  • @simbayauk
    @simbayauk Год назад +1

    The foods I buy have gone up more than 50%. I don't understand how they get their figures.

  • @JJ-zo8sh
    @JJ-zo8sh Год назад +4

    Prices are not going to go down, they will just eventually settle at 2-4% per year

  • @AldousC
    @AldousC Год назад +72

    They knew what they were voting for, SOVEREIGNTY!!!!!

    • @Steven-vo4ee
      @Steven-vo4ee Год назад +23

      Let us feed our kids SOVEREIGNTY and heat our houses with SOVEREIGNTY....

    • @stayhappybetrue
      @stayhappybetrue Год назад

      not really

    • @leethrelfalllt
      @leethrelfalllt Год назад +3

      Zzzzzz...😴😴😴

    • @beachcomber1able
      @beachcomber1able Год назад +4

      ​@@stayhappybetrue Isn't brexit just wonderful! 🥴

    • @macksmith4731
      @macksmith4731 Год назад

      i dont think we have that being run by globalists and international banking cartels

  • @garybird8646
    @garybird8646 Год назад +47

    Wholesale oil prices today are about the same as September 21, we were paying 137 per litre then. Locally Diesel averages about 167 a litre, the UK's core inflation is about the same as the EU but we are getting ripped off by supermarkets and energy suppliers.

    • @jonkayl9416
      @jonkayl9416 Год назад +5

      Bad Government

    • @mattsorrell9386
      @mattsorrell9386 Год назад

      And of course it's all Ukraine & Brexit lol! And the fact other countries own most of our companies or Energy suppliers or have a stake in them. I believe even British Gas/Centrica one of the majority shareholders is overseas investors

    • @mattsorrell9386
      @mattsorrell9386 Год назад +1

      A lot of our train companies are overseas owned aswell, we are probably subsidising trains for those countries through higher prices here in UK

    • @cliffsofmoher4220
      @cliffsofmoher4220 Год назад +2

      Dude don't blame supermarkets you kicked out all the supermarket staffs back in 2016 and kicked out all the farmers and that's why food is disappearing. So why not get off benefits and start working then maybe the production of bread milk and butter go back up. You kicked out all the factory workers and lorry drivers and all these skilled workers

    • @ilikelampshades6
      @ilikelampshades6 Год назад

      The government let them rip us off and then give them tax breaks. #nevertrustatory

  • @jameschamberlain5817
    @jameschamberlain5817 Год назад +55

    I'd love to know the salaries of all these people being interviewed.. I bet they're "really" in touch with reality.. You can guarantee that Rishi and his mates are making a fair Bob or two out of our slave to the wage jobs..

    • @PGHEngineer
      @PGHEngineer Год назад

      You're not a slave to a wage. You are a slave to nature. The food doesn't magic itself up.

    • @petermartyn9509
      @petermartyn9509 Год назад

      Rishi made his billions from having his company in cayman islands and investment in Moderna vaccines before it was announced it was working causing the share price to sky rocket....deep corruption 100%

  • @Trebor74
    @Trebor74 Год назад +8

    High prices are always here to stay. Businesses are always increasing prices complaining of supply costs,I've never seen any of them drop them once those costs reduce

    • @arrshath
      @arrshath Год назад +1

      Very true! Governments all over the world are applying outdated financial tools! If we see 10 years from now the product will be 5 to 7 times higher. Products are not deflating with rise in interest rates !!

  • @tessbakker7549
    @tessbakker7549 Год назад +20

    Gratitude alone wouldn't cut it, the return of an investment with Mrs. Julia David on my portfolio is mind blowing enough that i can't keep it all to myself, Such efficiency. Thanks for changing my life for good

    • @marklingard7705
      @marklingard7705 Год назад

      I'm surprised you know her too, I've been making a lot of profit investing with her for a few month now.

    • @michaelparas1499
      @michaelparas1499 Год назад

      Mrs Julia changed my life because of her high profits i got from investing with her.

    • @jessstimpert6781
      @jessstimpert6781 Год назад

      Please how can i reach her, so new to this

    • @liamjones6540
      @liamjones6540 Год назад

      I was skeptical at first until i decided to try. Its huge returns are awesome, can't say much

    • @tessbakker7549
      @tessbakker7549 Год назад

      She often interacts on Telegrams, using the user name written below

  • @sandygrowler7384
    @sandygrowler7384 Год назад +84

    What a surprise after removing free trade after Brexit. Who would have thought prices would go up and there would be import issues? 😮😂

    • @leethrelfalllt
      @leethrelfalllt Год назад +3

      Zzzzzz....😴😴😴

    • @LZE.
      @LZE. Год назад +4

      We have free trade with the EU

    • @californiadreamin8423
      @californiadreamin8423 Год назад +1

      @@leethrelfalllt Pathetic post.

    • @californiadreamin8423
      @californiadreamin8423 Год назад +16

      @@LZE. Do we have frictionless trade with the EU ?

    • @Steven-vo4ee
      @Steven-vo4ee Год назад +12

      @@LZE. It’s minimally “free”, quotas and tariffs still apply in certain circumstances, also and far more importantly there new enormous non-tariff barriers, customs red tape, the loss of frictionless trade and just-in-time supply chains.

  • @Paul-eb4jp
    @Paul-eb4jp Год назад +14

    Brexit Broke Britain

  • @dibdab101
    @dibdab101 Год назад +60

    reporter: ' is it Brexit's fault?'
    Expert: 'not at all, we are doing much better than expected'
    ....goes on to explain why not being in the EU is harming us 🙄

    • @SevenEllen
      @SevenEllen Год назад +7

      That's exactly why I didn't vote to leave; as it had never been done before, and no one truly knew exactly what was going to happen, it sounded so risky it felt much wise playing safe and staying true to the course. Now look at the mess we're in. The drive for Brexit was racism, which, like all other discrimination, is stupid. Nothing good has ever come of it, and now we're all paying for half the nation's stupidity.

    • @barrystubbs983
      @barrystubbs983 Год назад +1

      ​@Seven Ellen staying true to what cause ?

    • @MrColey786
      @MrColey786 Год назад +1

      ​@Barry Stubbs Staying true to not getting stung in the backside, all the lies the government fooled the public with about brexit, all aload of BS, oh we pay 100 million to EU every week, too many foreigners, reduce immigration...
      The dumb public voted out saying oh yeah, why give all that money to them when it's better in our pockets, we don't want EU laws as there immigration policy is endless and pathetic...
      Wheres that 100 million that we were going be better off by, why hasnt immigration reduced????
      In fact immigration numbers have increased last year and going up this year, so yes they fooled the public and if brexit was so viable other countries would be following??
      But we played the fools and now we are suffering, and of course this shitty government isn't going blame brexit now are they, worst decision we ever made in my history....

    • @MyName-cw4yr
      @MyName-cw4yr Год назад +1

      Actually inflation is down to government spending, not "brexit"

    • @dibdab101
      @dibdab101 Год назад

      @@MyName-cw4yr err... No it's not...
      We have the same core problems as other G7 nations (energy prices and food prices due to the Ukraine war, etc...) But the difference is in the supply chain, which has been disrupted thanks to Brexit (the EU is not exporting as much to the UK as when we were in the EU, and red tape has also pushed the prices up and delayed deliveries). On top of that we have labour shortages, which means it also disrupted our own internal chain of supply. And if we can't resolve the labour shortages, it might push wages up, which will fuel the inflation further....
      Inflation was also due to the removal of the energy price cap last April which pushed energy prices up more than in other countries... However, since the inflation is calculated year on year, it should mean that it will come down this April.

  • @Burnardcheasesaw
    @Burnardcheasesaw Год назад +1

    THE HYPOCRISY of the people in power with thousands of pounds in the bank.
    TELLING the average person on the average wage to cut back and tighten there belts 😮😂😂😂

  • @erdevon3257
    @erdevon3257 Год назад +2

    Still plenty of people driving to mcdonalds, having nails done etc. The biggest problem most people have is lack of financial control and knowing how to budget

  • @tilley6351
    @tilley6351 Год назад +142

    What about really removing/taxing the windfall profit that the energy companies are raking?

    • @whataquirkyguy
      @whataquirkyguy Год назад +3

      The energy inflation is a supply problem. You will not eliminate a supply problem by disincentivising companies to operate in the UK

    • @sueyourself5413
      @sueyourself5413 Год назад +31

      @@whataquirkyguy Except it's not. The supply is fine, you're not being "outbidded". You just don't tax energy companies operating in the UK properly.

    • @RealOGfikey
      @RealOGfikey Год назад +36

      @@whataquirkyguy Then nationalise them.

    • @diehardinvisible
      @diehardinvisible Год назад +13

      think of the poor shareholders. they need their dividend cheque

    • @kray97
      @kray97 Год назад +10

      A lot of the "inflation" is coming from corporate price gouging.

  • @speakup18
    @speakup18 Год назад +20

    Money's for war but not the poor..

  • @daliaa5294
    @daliaa5294 Год назад +15

    How can you say Brexit is not affecting us but every other EU country is not performing as bad

    • @LZE.
      @LZE. Год назад +2

      Because UK CPI is lower than the EU and Euro Area if you exclude energy, and energy has nothing todo with Brexit.

    • @ecaeas4439
      @ecaeas4439 Год назад +6

      I mean our energy policy is out of situ with the rest of Europe too. Other countries protected their population and businesses from energy price hikes, but the tories just let it happen.

    • @LZE.
      @LZE. Год назад +1

      @@ecaeas4439 Indeed.

    • @testman9541
      @testman9541 Год назад

      ​@@LZE. UK produce 40% of its energy, countries like France imports almost everything to get energy... but sure, nothing to do with Brexit and red tape 🎉

    • @TheChrisEMartin
      @TheChrisEMartin Год назад

      Not every other EU country. 12 countries in EU have worse inflations than UK and some - like Latvia and Hungary it is double. Inflation is huge in the central EU countries and Baltics

  • @chrisboro1204
    @chrisboro1204 Год назад +3

    Have they stopped printing empty money? This would help definitely!

  • @joegage1255
    @joegage1255 Год назад +1

    This is probably the dividends of Brexit that keep on paying us

  • @lellyparker
    @lellyparker Год назад +11

    Taking money away from people can also feed inflation. Look at energy prices. The less energy people use, the more the energy companies increase the standing charges to compensate for people using less.

  • @theBagheera22
    @theBagheera22 Год назад +18

    That economist desperate to avoid saying brexit has anything to do with us being the outlier in the g7

    • @paulcrovella6239
      @paulcrovella6239 Год назад +5

      Thats the problem. None of these experts ever want to blame brexit.

    • @alessandro.ofc__06
      @alessandro.ofc__06 Год назад

      @@paperplane-ol2iz Sactions on Russia should be lifted or at least eased, aid to Ukraine reduced, the signing of agreements like *CANZUK* and a rebalancing of the British public finances could help a little...
      I'm not British, I just gave my opinion on a possible solution to the UK🇬🇧crisis :D
      Greetings from Brazil🇧🇷✌

  • @smdutton
    @smdutton Год назад +57

    A yes… the right track… feels like it.
    Europe seems to be having a greater time though… thank god for brexit… not being able to enjoy a solid trading block. 🙃🙃🙃🙃

    • @luminousfractal420
      @luminousfractal420 Год назад +3

      Shame that whole usa deal fell apart on boris/trump huh. Eugenics 🤑

    • @Josh95x
      @Josh95x Год назад +3

      If you'd listened then you'd know the issue is partly due to the economy doing better than expected and hasn't slowed down as much as it needs to for inflation to go down. We don't want a booming economy right now

    • @laserraiset3300
      @laserraiset3300 Год назад +6

      we don't need uk in eu, better take ukraine, moldova, georgia, serbia, albania, montenegro to eu

    • @chrissilver7719
      @chrissilver7719 Год назад +3

      ​@@Josh95x I don't think there is much chance of a booming economy.

    • @dibdab101
      @dibdab101 Год назад

      Indeed... inflation is still above 10% here, while similar economies are going down rapidly. France's is virtually half ours (5.7%) and Germany down to 7.4%.The US down to 4.9% (from 6.04% last month)..and yet, these moronic politicians will insist that Brexit is going swimmingly until they are as blue in the face as their newly, printed in Poland (😂...oh the irony!), British passports. But hey ho, as long as the Daily Mail has a disrupted snooker match to report about, who are we to point out the obvious problems...?
      funnily enough I've just come back from France to visit family. They have no shortages in supermarkets, and they were quite shocked when I told them that we do over here (and no, they have not heard of any 'weather phenomenon' disrupting the supply chain...funny that)

  • @mamayun7442
    @mamayun7442 Год назад +1

    Meanwhile your royal family living a good life 😅😅😅

  • @lewis6138
    @lewis6138 Год назад +1

    The UK is just awful nowadays, the food prices, the housing crisis, the increase in crime, the increasing cost of driving, increase in rent, increase in bills, and general awful government methods.

  • @PastaParcel313
    @PastaParcel313 Год назад +59

    Raising interest rates is designed to reduce the supply of money as a way to cut inflation, but the problem now is people barely have even enough as it is. Mortgages and rent going up will leave people homeless, or leave the government with a problem to subsidise or prop it all up in some way. Can’t see any sense in just mindlessly raising rates, they don’t think if the tool they’re using is right

    • @JohnHuxleySavage
      @JohnHuxleySavage Год назад +10

      Problem is reserve banks have an obligation to manage inflation, and the only tool they have is interest rates. Governments can do a heck of a lot more than that - like taxing massive profits (and CEO and executive bonuses and salaries) and then using that money to provide essential services. They could also take utilities into public ownership and run them for the common good, rather than private profits of billionaires.

    • @full__tilt
      @full__tilt Год назад +3

      I would prefer they cut rates to help home owners and renters - even if it reduces the value of the pound and increases inflation even more

    • @benghiskahn3673
      @benghiskahn3673 Год назад +2

      We need looser monetary combined with targeted tightening of fiscal policy controls. There's huge amount of money been creamed off the top by some but were supposed to pretend like were all in the same boat. Additionally, what is the Treasury doing about the tens of billions that it handed out to fraudulent claimants? Sod all.

    • @jim-es8qk
      @jim-es8qk Год назад

      It also reduces the supply of money to farmers. Food inflation is 18%.

    • @jonkayl9416
      @jonkayl9416 Год назад

      Agreed, Interest rates would normally slow down the creation of new money (new Dept). That only works if the pound is isolated, it is not. Some of the inflation is home grown and interest rates would help with that but much of the inflation is imported - High Energy costs and Brexit Extra burden. So interest rate increasing will only push up inflation more, that's what we are seeming. The real reason the interest rates are going up is to stop more imported inflation by holding up the pound. So it kind of cancelled out any help cause mortgages and rents are going up. All because of awful bad government our crazy energy policy in the last 20 years. Should have invested much more in renewable and energy storage. We need a new Government.

  • @paxundpeace9970
    @paxundpeace9970 Год назад +19

    In addition the pound lost 20% in value against the Euro over the past 8 years.

    • @adrianrouse5148
      @adrianrouse5148 Год назад +1

      And what is the real value of the euro. Why has the ecb stopped printing euro bonds. Now it's green euro bonds. How many trillions held by members. Try to sell some. Try to trade some. Can't? ?? They are worthless. Nobody wants them. But they do look good on the books.

    • @TheNDofUO
      @TheNDofUO Год назад +1

      Life under the Tory government

  • @coscinaippogrifo
    @coscinaippogrifo Год назад +23

    What about rents? The level of increase, in the double-digits percentage figures, is what's making many people poorer. There is no action from the Government to stop what is a huge profiteering from some wealthy landlords, and what's a necessity for poorer ones who took on a mortgage for their real estate. Things are going crazy, offers without viewings, credit checks performed just to allow people to view a property, let alone to make an offer... This is insane

    • @julija5564
      @julija5564 Год назад

      renting always was an expensive thing., then buying own house.

  • @AmanSingh-jy4fc
    @AmanSingh-jy4fc Год назад +2

    UK rest in peace ✌️🕊️

  • @windsong3wong828
    @windsong3wong828 Год назад +1

    The UK economy is in a deep funk…..it has lost a lot of competitiveness , same as Europe.
    High oil and gas price……loss of Russian business……more monies for defense budget.
    Ukraine reconstruction.

  • @markhayward7400
    @markhayward7400 Год назад +40

    The UK economy, unlike other G7 countries and EU members, is dealing with the unique problems caused by Brexit. Who would have thought that cutting yourself off from your nearest and most important trading partner would cause problems? Only everyone who voted Remain!

    • @PGHEngineer
      @PGHEngineer Год назад +5

      And yet France is the place with high unemployment, even more government debts and people rioting on the streets.
      Here, we just stopped eating racks of ribs and bought more chicken.

    • @johnross2924
      @johnross2924 Год назад +1

      It's the greedy fat cats that are robbing us, nothing more than a wealth grab 👹

    • @joakimtag7820
      @joakimtag7820 Год назад +3

      @@PGHEngineer France is richer than UK since 2021. France have also a better HDI life quality ranked than UK, they have also only +5% higher prices cost for 2023 and only 11% for energy when UK have 11% and 175% for energy. France have 7% of unemployement because French have better works and are much more paid with 2600€/citizens when its 2450€/citizens in UK but everything is cheaper in France and Germany for Flats/Houses pricing for exemple : 1100€/month for a 2 rooms in center of Paris on a luxury Town ( same for Berlin ) but for 1100€/month in London you have a room in a stranger family on a poverty Town far of London center.

    • @joakimtag7820
      @joakimtag7820 Год назад +2

      @@PGHEngineer In France they protest for not having the same bad life of British and became poverty like british. In UK you cant eating everyday because of lower salary paid ( -2% than French ) and higher prices of flats/houses ( +22% than France and Germany ) and food pricing +27% than France

    • @joakimtag7820
      @joakimtag7820 Год назад +2

      @@PGHEngineer Fun fact : Paris is became the biggest Financial place than UK and Europe since 2022. Because of every bad English politics and every lower paid working in UK + lower quality working

  • @frixosfriedman7813
    @frixosfriedman7813 Год назад +20

    Inflation eventually going back down isnt the same as prices going back down. It just means that prices arent going up as much anymore. Will prices go back down to their original levels???

    • @MV-se4di
      @MV-se4di Год назад

      I think no

    • @arrshath
      @arrshath Год назад

      No !! Products doesn't deflate anymore and the governments all over world are implementing outdated financial tools. Corporate greed sucks 😔

  • @darthwiizius
    @darthwiizius Год назад +12

    Please don't get sucked in by "economists" paid by interest groups and banks. This one works for the Institute of Directors who have a vested interest in supressing wages. Inflation does not follow wage growth, inflation follows bad economic decision making by ruling politicians and wage suppression. In the 70s they blamed wage growth for inflation instead of the costs of the Cold War, the Vietnam War and the oil crisis to instal a government of wage suppression and high unemployment. We are seeing the same again, deliberate destruction of the economy so companies can suppress wages to increasing levels of slave labour, and again despite this for 13 years just like in the 80s we have the worst figures, simultaneously, on both growth and inflation in the developed world. STOP LISTENING TO MISINFORMATION. In the words of a physicist: "You can have the best, the most elegant, the most complete theory ever thought of but then we test it against the real World, if a single part contradicts what we see in the real World we dismiss it and throw it into the bin". How many times have we been told that the opposite of what we see in the real World is what we need to do by paid economists of special interest groups and the reich wing?

    • @boota1979
      @boota1979 Год назад

      @Darth Wiizius Well said I could not agree more. The result is always the same, it's the publics fault, I am sick and tired of hearing it, the same old thing for decades. You cannot alter the fact that governments set agendas and run the economy, the fault always lies with them, no matter how it is spun. Like they say if voting actually changed anything they would ban it.

  • @joaquinmendez3396
    @joaquinmendez3396 Год назад +1

    I expect to see lower food prices with time in the continent. In the U.K I don't think so. Fruit exporters in Spain are focusing on inner market such as Poland. They are changing the focus from Britain to other countries in the EU.

  • @TransitionedToAShark
    @TransitionedToAShark Год назад +2

    I don’t mind paying £30 for bread but at least raise the hour rate to £80

  • @adventurefella
    @adventurefella Год назад +10

    It’s greedflation - why can’t economists admit that?! They are awash with their own professional biases

  • @kray97
    @kray97 Год назад +13

    Brexit totally worked out for you blokes!

    • @LZE.
      @LZE. Год назад

      Did you even watch the video? She repeatedly said that it was not Brexit.

    • @ohyesitsme
      @ohyesitsme Год назад +7

      @@LZE. And you believed it.

    • @kray97
      @kray97 Год назад +2

      @@LZE. Learn to think critically.

  • @mattjackson777
    @mattjackson777 Год назад +4

    The ridiculously overvalued house prices will come back to bite the country and could be the final nail in the coffin for the UK’s future.
    With the global population now stagnating, demand for educated immigration is heating up and young workers unable to afford the crazy house prices and facing such high taxes would be better off leaving the country. If they start leaving en-mass to countries like Canada, Australia, USA, New Zealand, etc, this will likely accelerate the decline and businesses will also look elsewhere.
    The UK needs to allow house prices to quickly crash back to realistic levels, i.e halve in price and prevent banks from leading more than 4 times salary going forward to prevent a repeat of the crazy property inflation we saw between 2000-2022.

    • @Mr11ESSE111
      @Mr11ESSE111 Год назад +1

      They would not go to Australia,zealand,canada,usa because there housing are even worse

  • @LifeCoachJayRiley
    @LifeCoachJayRiley Год назад +3

    Not everyone is feeling the pinch.
    The people on the lowest income are spending more of their income which hasn't gone up that much in years on just day to day living expenses.
    When your rich and have assets that generate you money your not thinking about living expenses that's the difference your free.

  • @stephaniewoodson7655
    @stephaniewoodson7655 Год назад +1

    An incredibly moronic coronation should be added to this price. A monarchy with a kingdom that is starving. Who's brilliant idea is this?

  • @KeithRingo
    @KeithRingo Год назад +15

    Good thing brexit took back control. I was getting worried for a minute

  • @thenoodlebuddy
    @thenoodlebuddy Год назад +5

    One of the biggest reasons is due to profiteering from companies just look at the increased revenues, profits and dividends

  • @etiennedelaunois1737
    @etiennedelaunois1737 Год назад +9

    "The British economy doesn't behave as badly as expected." Well of course, the economy went down so much that it would bot be possible to go down even more than it was. So the only thing it could do is bounced.

  • @vulgar_scabby_beaver
    @vulgar_scabby_beaver Год назад +41

    but fish, passports, a nice plate of sovereignty........just believe, click your heels together close your eyes and you'll almost believe you're on the sunny uplands riding a unicorn.

  • @fayereeve8154
    @fayereeve8154 Год назад +1

    How many of us actually eat fresh fruit veg yogurts cheese eggs beef chicken regular weekly instead of main food shop pasta bread patotoes cheapest processed food 😢

  • @richardextall2002
    @richardextall2002 Год назад +1

    The truth they are not telling about #Brexit

  • @thenoodlebuddy
    @thenoodlebuddy Год назад +7

    This isn't right, supermarket own brand bread has increased from around 45/55p - to 90p or more now.
    This goes to show that the poorest in society are hit hardest by inflation, reason being the big brands have bigger margins so won't increase their prices as much whereas those reliant on the cheapest goods have small margins and therefore are not hardest compared to what they are used to

    • @paxundpeace9970
      @paxundpeace9970 Год назад

      Yes the cheap goods have gone more expensive

  • @problemsolverthinktank859
    @problemsolverthinktank859 Год назад +7

    Let’s not forget the corporations and MPs making alot of 💰 because of this.

  • @Kaizen917
    @Kaizen917 Год назад +11

    One of the most brutal myths specific to Brexit and foodstuffs is that if doomsday scenario didnt happen immediately after the withdrawal, then it never will. More likely, we will be seeing a death of thousand cuts development for the UK where nothing seems too different on a day-to-day basis but evaluating after 1,3,5 or 10+ years people are likely to get a bit of a shock.

    • @benghiskahn3673
      @benghiskahn3673 Год назад

      Exactly. The Govt have deliberately DELAYED some of the nastier elements of Brexit. How many times has the UK delayed implementing checks on goods entering from the EU? About 10 times now. We'll be sued eventually.

  • @robertgill4476
    @robertgill4476 Год назад +1

    This is what happens when sending a vast amount of money to other countries and not helping ourselves out first

  • @goodnightmyprince6734
    @goodnightmyprince6734 Год назад +9

    My chocolate bar went up by 25%

    • @luminousfractal420
      @luminousfractal420 Год назад +1

      And thats owned by a u.s. company right? 😂 Nice one borris

    • @KeithRingo
      @KeithRingo Год назад +1

      100% on my chocolate chip cookies 😢

  • @joedonnelly6721
    @joedonnelly6721 Год назад +7

    This can't be right, JR Smogg promised brexit would cause prices to drop.

    • @Steven-vo4ee
      @Steven-vo4ee Год назад +3

      He said red tape would be cut too, instead we swapped a molehill of EU red tape for a mountain of Brexit red, white and blue tape....

    • @mwd331
      @mwd331 Год назад

      Shoes for peasants.

    • @Boghopper9999
      @Boghopper9999 Год назад +1

      ​@@mwd331suspect Moggie meant pheasant's

    • @rutrakainmeiez5107
      @rutrakainmeiez5107 Год назад

      They said the jab was save and effective too🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @mwd331
      @mwd331 Год назад

      @@rutrakainmeiez5107 they are. What relevance does this have to inflation?

  • @GdaySport
    @GdaySport Год назад +13

    This is a disgrace, and it wasn't even brought up at prime minister's question time! The government has let this get out of control and has its head in the sand. They should be held held to account and made to do their jobs instead of lining their pockets.

  • @michaelkelly9545
    @michaelkelly9545 Год назад

    Prices will never go back down. Wages will never match inflation

  • @kabulpaws3386
    @kabulpaws3386 Год назад +1

    Just before brexit
    1 pound 1.60 to dollar now 1.24
    1 pound 1.42 to euro now 1. 14
    Keep saying it's not brexit

  • @JugglinJellyTake01
    @JugglinJellyTake01 Год назад +5

    This is nonsense. Many items have doubled in price in the last 18 months while value items have all but disappeared. For example, frozen sweet corn and wholewheat fusilli have doubled in price. Average energy bills are now around £2,500 or more up from £800 for the cheapest tariff 18 months ago. The *removal of value items* from supermarkets means *inflation is around 50% to 100%* over a year for the poorest. *We no longer have just fuel poverty, we have extreme fuel poverty.*
    Benefits have remained the same at around £3,800 a year with further attacks on benefits from Sunak. Just to cover reasonable living benefit claimants would need a *minimum of £9,000 per year* to cover food, energy, council tax, household goods, clothing and transport. That does not even include rent nor health needs.
    These figures do not even include the near doubling of rents in many places and the dramatic rise in homelessness nor does it take into account those who are servicing debt after being on furlough, those with long covid struggling to get PIP, the attacks on the unemployed by the *DWP which has seen sanctions rise at least 50% since pre-covid.*
    Channel 4 is reporting these issues in isolation and *failing to perform overall calculations* and failing to hold the government and agencies to account for lack of benefit rises, minimum wage increases and engagement with striking workers.

  • @maykolee
    @maykolee Год назад +12

    Good time is over, bad time is here, prepare yourself for the hordes of struggling single mums

    • @luminousfractal420
      @luminousfractal420 Год назад

      Or just prepare yourself to remove eugenicists from power using the mental health act. A danger to themselves and others. Psychopathy.

    • @BuckshotB
      @BuckshotB Год назад +4

      Single mums lol, they get it easy just sitting on their large backsides doing nothing collecting benefits in a house that again is covered by benefits

    • @armandofilipe4322
      @armandofilipe4322 Год назад +2

      Specially in the uk woman with no jobs still popping out kids, specially the younger gen of 18 years old not working but having like 2 plus kids but it’s ok the working class will take care of it.

    • @forwhat-gg3sn
      @forwhat-gg3sn Год назад +1

      Yeah because being on benefits is living like a millionaire right. You’re as ignorant as it gets.

    • @californiadreamin8423
      @californiadreamin8423 Год назад +1

      Twaddle.

  • @gavinreid9184
    @gavinreid9184 Год назад +16

    Mortgage rates seems like to proverbial financial hammer. We need more imagination in our government institutions to find more suitable tools and approaches.

    • @rberto3804
      @rberto3804 Год назад

      Exactly, when our energy and food prices have soared the BoE also making our mortgages jump up hundreds of £££s each month is the last thing we need.

    • @bengardener8928
      @bengardener8928 Год назад

      @@rberto3804 The last thing you need you mean. For me I want interest rates go to much higher because that's what the country needs to have effective resource allocation and for the economy to do better, productivity to increase.

    • @rberto3804
      @rberto3804 Год назад

      @Ben Gardener it's just further wealth reallocation from the working and middle classes to the rich and super-rich. In other words; plummeting living standards for the many, not the few.

    • @bengardener8928
      @bengardener8928 Год назад

      @@rberto3804 Keep telling yourself that. That is what low interest rates and credit expansion do, not high interest rates. They create money devaluing your pay cheque and hand it to the rich via speculation and the bubbles in the speculation economy. Spending power is being taken away from you, you're right, but that happens via expanding the credit supply.
      Another way it makes the poor poorer is due to resource misallocation that leads to low paying jobs, because as asset prices rise those businesses that were able to expand effectively by reinvesting their income find this slowed to a halt due to asset price inflation and easy money policy

    • @bengardener8928
      @bengardener8928 Год назад

      @@rberto3804 All low interest rates do is destroy profitability in the real economy and replace it with the speculation economy. Then people wonder why they are getting poorer.

  • @Pythoner
    @Pythoner Год назад +1

    talking about how good the UK economy is doing, sitting in Ireland

  • @NbyD
    @NbyD Год назад +1

    The UK always has struggled with food prices the most.. might have to do with the weather and the island position..

  • @SirDennisReynolds
    @SirDennisReynolds Год назад +6

    Good job people that wanted Brexit, the EU is not a great institution in many respects but leaving it and destroying your trade relationships was always a bad idea. Now the UK has little negotiating leverage with major powers and is at the mercy of largely America now to help them. Sad state of affairs, a country ruined by Conservatives and their Austerity

  • @rozza4671
    @rozza4671 Год назад +5

    As the government printed over £500 billion during covid, and it did no study to see where it would ultimately end up it’s no surprise that there is double digit inflation. The average joe doesn’t have that money it’s in hands of wealthy land owners and big energy companies who pay little tax so the money isn’t taken back out of circulation

  • @JugglinJellyTake01
    @JugglinJellyTake01 Год назад +40

    The top rate of tax needs to rise to 60% and minimum wage to £15 per hour. Ultimately the top rate of tax needs to go up to 90%. The Bank of England's interest rates is a blunt tool for a complex problem that punishes the poor and impoverishes those on middle incomes.

    • @AndreAmorim-AA
      @AndreAmorim-AA Год назад

      @6:10 indeed that what I was thinking here. Isn’t that the because the Cantillon's effect?

    • @Colin623
      @Colin623 Год назад +1

      Sounds great, but what would you do if you were in that position ? I for one wouldn't stay in the UK live in a country where taxes are low, so how much more tax revenue do you think that would bring into the treasury ? or do you think it would actually end up having less in the treasury to spend on other important things !

    • @JugglinJellyTake01
      @JugglinJellyTake01 Год назад +1

      @@Colin623 Then by all means if you were the likes of Amazon, Google chase them for their taxes. Many companies are unable to move eg retailers, hotel chains, manufacturers, distribution companies, transport companies, oil and gas companies, public sector executives, bankers. The idea that those earning the top rate of income tax would suddenly disappear abroad is absurd scaremongering.

    • @Colin623
      @Colin623 Год назад +3

      @@JugglinJellyTake01 LOL, you are showing how little you understand how things work, why do you think many companies register out of the UK ? Ireland being a favourite, because taxes are lower ! So it would be inevitable that many companies would leave the UK and set up elsewhere, so, you don't have to stop trading in the UK but like MacDonald, Amazon etc pay little tax because you move the company name overseas ! Has it not ever occurred to you why companies like MacDonald's and Amazon pay hardly any tax in this country ?

    • @JugglinJellyTake01
      @JugglinJellyTake01 Год назад +1

      @@Colin623 Indeed they trade through offshore acounts with extortionate rates for rents on their properties to avoid tax. They should be persued and tax havens closed down.
      Invoices go though tax havens for imported goods and the prices hiked on the new invoice to avoid import tax. This again is tax avoidance and should be prosecuted.
      There are many cases of politicians weighing in the HMRC to prevent them investigating the most egregious tax dodgers. They are taking UK wages and moving them abroad, they are not investing in the UK nearly as much as the like to claim.
      You can LOL all you like with your neoliberal scare stories of companies fleeing the UK.
      Those companies that leave the UK would invest less money in their companies while domestic companies reinvest more money into their companies and workforce as it does not make sense to pay executives more. The non dom companies lose out if they fail to pay the market rate.
      As for Amazon and McDonalds they only 'succeed' because of laws in their favour and poor workers rights. McDonalds in particular employ predominantly under 25s and typically much lower ages.
      That is not success, that is a politically corrupt system and opportunistic greed.

  • @Ricky-tr2hd
    @Ricky-tr2hd Год назад +5

    I work in a IT support role where I have to remember 100 different things. I get paid 22k and in the US it's treble. 😂

    • @sebastijanp3
      @sebastijanp3 Год назад

      How is it possible to live with 22K...i do not understand that

    • @Ricky-tr2hd
      @Ricky-tr2hd Год назад

      @@sebastijanp3 a drag...

  • @SurroundedByClowns1926
    @SurroundedByClowns1926 Год назад

    Iceland are now charging £14 for a packet of 32 toilet roles that's absolutely appalling/shocking!

  • @mariuszklin6433
    @mariuszklin6433 Год назад +5

    When UK voted for Brexit and when everyone was furloughed during pandemic I knew we will have to pay for it sooner or later. Just a shame for people who never voted leave and worked through pandemic have to pay equally as much as everyone else

    • @mariuszklin6433
      @mariuszklin6433 Год назад

      @Aaron Goldberg what do you think you should be compensated for by Polish people? BTW this is month old thread did you just wake up from coma??

  • @sask4453
    @sask4453 Год назад +4

    Why is it that UK prices are higher than other European countries? It seems that someone is not balancing the books to enable British consumers to purchase goods at more reasonable prices. I do not believe for one second that the UK Government are incapable of controlling how high food prices increase or the interest rates. It is more like the usual suspects are wanting to squeeze the pockets of the many to line those of the few, nothing new under the sun, the filthy rich are at it again at the expense of the most vulnerable and financially disadvantaged.
    If you have a skill you can use to make extra money that will be lucrative, I suggest now is the time to put it to work for you. They hide their extras so why should the rules be different for everyone else, so work smarter not harder just like they have done. No point waiting for them to introduce mega pay increases as the amount they will give will be minuscule compared to the cost of products and the new, hiked, interest rates. We need a revolution to vote in non-cronies which will be hard to find, considering most have been at it for years and getting away with it under their devised loopholes and offshore accounts. We should have offshore accounts, it's every person for themselves in this wolves devouring world of unsuspecting souls just trying to make a living for themselves, and their families if they have one and to contribute to their society like a good citizen. The less abled just want compassion, a job they can actually do and stay in, more control over their own lives and the ability like most people desire, to live comfortably, independently and free of debt with a few holidays at home or abroad.
    I hope the government remember helping the most needy is their duty above all else and no excuses are acceptable. I hope we have better choices in political parties as this feels less like democracy and more like a manipulated, non-option of either lefties and more lefties in terms of a two party race between the Labour party and the Conservative party. I really cannot distinguish the difference in characteristics out of the two runners, if this is all we have I cannot see much changing for Britian and it concerns me as I'm sure it will with other Brits. Jumping to a new party like the Reform party looks good but could tell a different story on paper, especially given they have no experience in running so many institutions, juggling all of them, and dealing with complex issues that are intertwined in every other profession of health, business, financial, social, political and religious organisations.