Sultan of Bling wrote: » Public v private = divide and conquer. This is exactly what the politicians want when they bring in the inevitable cuts just like they did in 2009. Please don't fall for it again. All workers public and private sector need to unite against the long term unemployed wasters and the Margaret cash"s of this world that hard working private and public sector workers are expected to fund.
Damian Faint Carp wrote: » Not a hope, cutting nurses pay during this would create a political storm
Triangle wrote: » Sweet Jesus, we've come full circle. Cheap money means borrow more...... That lead to the last financial crisis when we went from owing 40 bill to 240 billion in a short time.
addaword wrote: » You can say the same about architects, vets, dentists, secretaries, cleaners, quantity surveyors. If and when they get a job in the public sector, they do not give it it up. Ever. Unless they are very ambitious.
Snow Garden wrote: » I was 5.5 years in the public sector in 2000s and never had a single formal performance appraisal with my manager. I checked with a former colleague and he says it's still the case. And I got my increments every year.
AndrewJRenko wrote: » So we're talking 10-15 years ago. What organisation is your former colleague in now that is not doing formal performance appraisals?
AndrewJRenko wrote: » Maybe it's my faulty memory, but I think there was something about our bankers and property developers conspiring to blow up our economy that lead to the last crisis.
FVP3 wrote: » We definitely need to take more money out of the economy as this crisis unfolds.
addaword wrote: » The last crises (2008) was caused by poor public sector management: politicians spending too much and buying public sector votes, poor regulation by the central bank and regulator etc. Other people just went by the rules the public sector (which includes the government) made. It was the private sector which lost mostly then too. Everyone else kept their jobs and their pensions.
AndrewJRenko wrote: » Don't blame public sector staff for the decisions of the governments that we all elected.
Snow Garden wrote: » He is part of the HSE. Non front line.
addaword wrote: » I will blame the regulators office and the central bank and the government for the 2008 crash. They were all paid by the public purse, with golden pensions, so were public sector if you ask me.
AndrewJRenko wrote: » The regulators office didn't come up with the 'light touch regulation policy' that the regulators and the central bank operated under. That came from Charlie McCreevy and Micheal McDowell. Go have a chat with them about the impacts of their decisions.
SouthWesterly wrote: » How much less? 18,000. Because that's what been advocated here. It wouldn't even be minimum wage. You really don't know what you're talking about. Having worked most of my life in the private, sector, I'm underpaid for what I do.
Danzy wrote: » Will that be allowed by Brussels though? Replaying the decisions that turned the Wall street crash in to a depression 3 years later isn't going to be tolerable to them. The yanks are already looking at another multi trillion stimulus. What would you do add a word if you had to run your own business and the reality of that, of life, overwhelmed your Libertarian ideology. There is no hiding then. You are hoping they accelerate the economic decline.
addaword wrote: » That is the reason public sector wages will be cut. Ask any TD privately and they will tell you the same.
Mad_maxx wrote: » we wont see an american style stimulus in europe because germany wont wear it thats already patently clear
Mike3287 wrote: » Germans will need the stimulus themselves Car industry will be in the gutter after this
Mad_maxx wrote: » germans apart from being neurotic about inflation are content to tighten their belts , opposing stimulus is not just ideology on the part of the german institutions , its politically popular with the electorate , germans are not spend , spend , spend like we are
Mike3287 wrote: » They'll have to change ways, if the rest of Europe has no money who's going to buy cars off them? VW alone are 200 billion in the red WFH is not a good business model for it's biggest industry, it's going to be brutal
TheDavester wrote: » I’ve been in civil service for last 3 years and get them... the recently hired ones are getting quarterly ones
Deleted User wrote: » you preparing a similar thesis on demand for "the private sector" are you? the idea, right from the off, that public services should be mainly measured on efficiency is so deeply flawed with even a moment's thought that one ought be embarrassed to take such a poseur position if a service was so easily rated by mere efficiency or profit was either the driver or possible then it wouldnt be a public service is the fairly obvious conclusion. you could make a child understand that, if the child hadn't already made its mind up on the subject and wasn't only trying to score lazy points. secondly, public sector cannot declare bankruptcy and walk away from its services. that means a totally different structure and ideology to any private enterprise. thirdly, public services are provided to users, not customers, and paid for out of govt funds, levied from the usual range of sources, not shareholders or customers. you, as a taxpayer (congrats on that by the way, literally everyone here you're arguing against is also a taxpayer) arent a customer, and aren't a shareholder. civil servants have a manager and a structure under which they answer, to a tightness to legislation, audit, public interest and scrutiny that is unheard of in any private organisation of comparable size or scale or otherwise. the public service is run along slow but exceeding fine lines of command and practice for several good reasons, not least of which is that our govt changes every five odd years and the new bosses take two years to learn what the civil service (or their new dept if god help us they are a minister) actually does and why, and another two years to come up with a plan about how they might achieve whatever bastardized objectives their garbled manifesto cobbled together- leaving one year of execution, usually hampered by it being another election year. the average boards-level complainant has frankly no idea how much protection the civil service profession/expertise actually provides to the wellbeing and stability of this country in fending off the TDs we as an electorate are stupid enough to vote in. before ye start, the idea that a new disestablishment party like SF could come in and sweep all this elaborate custom-and-practice away like either their voters thought or their politicians pretended to think is such a laughable non-runner legally, politically or economically that it bears no further mention. the worst two things about the civil service is when it tries to ape private sector ideology (neoliberalism out of silicon valley is the latest but cannot even be convincingly applied to silicon valley, let alone a public sector anywhere) and when it tries to justify its existence as a public sector cravenly to those with little wit enough to understand why every. functioning. country. in. the. world. has. a. public. sector. that. costs. money. and. is. meant. to. cost. money. the rest is noise. now its a saturday lads so ive given ye that for free. if ye want to discuss pay cuts, im always interested in what a non-manager, non-customer, non-shareholder has to say as long as its not uninformed ranting, or unmannerly. have at.