Posts

Northern Ireland Protocol – is there a simpler solution for protecting the EU Single market ?

This blog was originally published last October. Given the efforts currently in progress to secure a solution to the NI Protocol , I've updated it to reflect changes since then, in the hope that it may contribute to a practical solution for import compliance monitoring. ****** I’ve often wondered why Brussels are so concerned about goods intended for use in Northern Ireland straying into the Irish Republic.... After all, UK was a member of the EU until very recently, and the standards we apply to our goods within UK are still closely comparable with those applied in EU. For the most part, this is likely to remain so, despite our current national obsession with 'going it alone'. Tariffs for UK goods imported to EU are effectively 'zero-rated' under the current withdrawal agreement, so there is little financial incentive to 'smuggle' goods into Eire from NI. The proportion of goods flowing into NI from UK that is destined for Eire is also very small.Why ther

Climate Change - Whatever happened to the Next Ice-Age ?

  A midst all the discussion about the perils of global warming, there has been no mention recently of when we might expect the start of the next Ice-Age.... This was a topic that hit the headlines some years ago and was all the rage for a year or two before fading into obscurity. It is probably no coincidence that this media fade-out coincided with the increased coverage in the media about global warming and its wider implications for our future well-being. There is now no doubt that our climate is warming – and doing so quite rapidly. There is also little doubt that our large-scale release of greenhouse gases since the dawn of the industrial era in the early 1800s will have contributed significantly to this process. However, despite the views of some environmentalists, our planet and its atmosphere are chaotic and unpredictable beasts, and the jury is still out on whether ‘man-made’ climate warming is the principal, let alone the only, contributor.  We need to look at past cli

What’s Wrong with Our UK Tax System ?

In short – it stifles incentive and enterprise..... Let me try to explain. The Covid pandemic, Brexit, and more recently the worldwide ‘cost of living crisis’ have undoubtedly put a huge strain on many western economies since the start of the decade, and ours in UK is no exception.  The many billions gobbled up by pandemic costs and the furlough scheme in particular were but one example of the financial challenges we faced, and these will still have to be paid for somehow.  Raising taxes was a logical response during the first years of the pandemic in an attempt to pay down some of our mounting debt. Maintenance of ultra-low interest rates and effectively ‘printing money’ via quantitative easing was another means adopted to try and soften the immediate economic blow in the late 2010s, but unfortunately had the effect of making the economy appear more robust than it actually was....and building up our debt mountain alarmingly. These policies, which were in any case out of kilter w

Blogspot: How to insert an internal cross-reference using anchor points

In case anyone is still trying to figure out how to insert links to other items within a single blog, try this remedy. No guarantees, of course, but it worked for me.... A.       Inserting an internal cross-reference using anchor points If you are someone who occasionally authors quite long blogs as I do, it can be helpful to your readers to provide links within the blog to other paragraphs or footnotes.  I haven't so far found an option for creating internal links with the current Blogspot offering – the only option available seems to be creating links to external sites via their full URLs (I may have missed something, so please let me know if you have found one).  You can, however, insert appropriate HTML code to create internal links yourself, since Blogspot does allow access to the HTML version of your blog directly via the 'Compose/HTML' toggle switch (mid-left of the display). This may seem daunting if you haven't handled HTML code before yourself, but it is wo

China and Covid Part 2 – The Sequel

  Recent events in China have confirmed that chairman Xi’s decision to go for ‘Zero Covid or bust’ was the wrong one, as suggested in my blog ‘ China and Covid’ back in March.  The SARS-CoV-2 Omicron BA-n variants are now virtually unstoppable, due to their extreme infectiousness, and any attempt to eradicate the virus entirely from a population was always doomed to failure. If there were any remaining question in the minds of our epidemiologists about the impossibility of eradicating a coronavirus with this degree of infectiousness, China’s 3-year 'experiment' has now effectively proven the case beyond reasonable doubt.... The widespread prediction earlier this year that the Chinese population would eventually rebel against perpetual lockdowns is already coming to pass – the only question is how far the population will be prepared to go to achieve its aims - and how nasty it will get. This will be determined largely by how the CCP attempts to deal with it. One thing is ce

What happened to all our Common Sense ?

  Pondering last week’s story about the closedown of the world’s largest online eBook library  by the US authorities led me back to the question asked increasingly often nowadays:   “Where has all our common sense gone ?” This might be a good opportunity to take a light-hearted 'tongue-in cheek' look at the logic (or lack of it) underlying human behaviour. What is it ? First of all, what is ‘common sense’ – and how do we define it ? To start with, here's a bit of personal history to put things in context. I can well remember from my early childhood the frequent exhortations I received from my parents in response to what I thought was perfectly reasonable behaviour: ‘…for goodness sake lad, just use your common sense for change...’. And I'm sure plenty of my contemporaries will have experienced the same thing. At the time, I really had no idea what this strange commodity might be, whether I actually had any, or if not, where I might be able to get some. Which w

Mini-Budget 23.9.22: Tax Implications and Financial Market Consequences

  Our brand  new chancellor has now delivered his much-heralded 'mini-budget'....how do his tax changes really look,  now that the market has responded and the dust has started to settle ? Although advancing the planned 1% reduction in the basic rate to 19% to April 2023 is of course welcome, it only represents an annual increase in take home pay of a maximum of £375 for someone earning £50,000, and proportionally less for those lower down the earnings scale. It comes against a backdrop of spiralling inflation, which is likely to undo all its potential gains before it even kicks in.  The reversal of Sunak's ill-judged  NI increase will help some of the working population, but will mainly benefit the better-off earners. Anyone  earning below £12.5k will get nothing out of either change; pensioners of course won't get any benefit from the NI change - they have already paid for their state pension and healthcare during their working lifetimes, and quite rightly aren't