
UK ‘growth' strategy is making the world a more dangerous place
What the current cost might be for the Dreadnought nuclear submarines being built by the time they are ready – this is currently running at £41 billion including contingency costs – is anyone's guess.
READ MORE: Treasury says Rachel Reeves crying at PMQs was 'personal matter'
In addition to this astronomical expenditure, Keir Starmer has now ordered twelve F-35 nuclear-bomb-carrying stealth jets from the US at an as-yet-unknown price or delivery date.
Why does the RAF needs stealth bombers in the first place, let alone 12 of such an aircraft? I appreciate that it might have something to do with Nato, in which Trump appears to have little interest, having walked out of its last little jolly before the end of its agenda. However, if it means selling American-made armaments, then that probably would be to his delight.
Keir Starmer has already admitted that he took his eye off the ball (when parliament was about to vote down his welfare policies) through his complete attention on all things Nato and his notion of being an important world leader.
READ MORE: Plane damaged by Palestine Action at Brize Norton spotted over Scotland
It looks to me that he has still put his world leadership notions to the fore with a pathetic attempt to pacify his MPs, while still pandering to all things nuclear in the arms industry.
Foreign Secretary David Lammy has flown to Turkey on a trade mission involving any defence ties the UK has with that country. He wants to export a number of UK Eurofighter Typhoons jets. This is all part of another free-trade agreement, this time between the UK and Turkey.
Talk about UK policies on growth. More like contributing to making the world a more dangerous planet. Why on earth anyone in Holyrood would want to be a part of this is beyond my comprehension. Time yet again to make more noise regarding Scotland's independence.
Alan Magnus-Bennett
Fife
TUESDAY'S 'click bait' was on BBC Scotland's Mornings with Kaye Adams, where the producers covered the UK Government's reduction of Personal Independence Payments, the Scottish version of which – called Adult Disability Payment – will be affected due to the way the Barnett Formula works.
The initial guests were from the TaxPayers' Alliance and The Poverty Alliance, both with differing views.
The taxpayer guy said the benefits bill was predicted to 'rocket' to £70 billion in 2035. The key word being 'rocket'.
The poverty guy said that the wealth gap was increasing, with more people needing help.
READ MORE: Anas Sarwar 'totally humiliated' by Labour's dramatic benefits U-turn
What I find disgraceful is the frequent anecdotes broadcast about 'the guy who lives next door and never works', who has a wife in another house and is living with his bidie-in, to whom he has sired a child, who have two cars and the latest smart phones.
This is the same trope that the Conservatives used during the 1980s in Thatcher's era, which lambasted people that had been turfed out of a job. They were told to 'get on their bikes to find a job' by Norman Tebbit, the Chingford Skinhead named by the Spitting Image crew.
They were lazy and good for nothing, waiting for handouts.
Whilst there are undoubtedly some people with the intention of getting something for nothing, the popular press during that time and again now seem to be creating a view that this abuse is rife. The truth is something quite different.
READ MORE: What it's actually like to apply for DWP disability benefits
Hansard (the Westminster Parliament record of reference) states that the overall rate of overpayments is now 3.7% (£9.7 billion) for 2023-24, compared to 3.6% (£8.3 billion) in 2022-23. Overpayments due to fraud were 2.8% compared to 2.7% last year while claimant error and official error remained at 0.6% and 0.3% respectively. The rate of overpayments in Universal Credit was 12.4% in 2023-24 compared to 12.7% in 2022-23.
Compare this to tax evasion. The UK's tax gap has widened, according to latest figures from HM Revenue & Customs. New data show that the UK missed out on £46.8bn of tax liabilities in the 2023-2024 financial year, or 5.3% of the total theoretical tax liabilities.
The gap refers to the difference between the total amount of taxes owed to the government and the amount actually collected. In 2024 this was reported to be £39.8bn or 4.8% of overall theoretical liabilities.
It would seem that pursuing tax-avoidance loopholes would be a better use of parliamentary time and effort.
Alistair Ballantyne
Angus
I WAS well impressed with Pat Kane's article 'Are you one of the doomscrollers? It's time for us to focus on hope instead' (June 28). He articulated on a number of issues that concern me. 'Hopescroll' – spot on.
James Grosset
Montrose
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
15 minutes ago
- The Independent
Why Starmer finally came out to give his full backing to his tearful chancellor
There are moments in politics where the situation has spun so badly out of control that somebody has to step in quickly to end the chaos. Most famously in recent history it was former 1922 committee chairman Sir Graham Brady's visit to Liz Truss in Downing Street to force her to resign after the mini-budget fallout. But last night Keir Starmer had reached such a moment. His government was in meltdown. A brutal 48 hours had seen him apparently lose control of his government's policy agenda after the welfare reform rebellion by Labour backbenchers. This had been followed by him failing to guarantee his chancellor's future in PMQs as she sat behind him in tears. The optics of the drama at PMQs fed into the picture of a government that was rapidly going into a tailspin. With a £5bn black hole in the country's finances left by the welfare retreat, fevered speculation over a reshuffle, and no real sign of a plan to sort things out. But the real problem was that the gilt markets – the same issue that ended the Truss government – had taken notice of what was happening and not happening and reacted accordingly. The black hole in the finances, the lack of a vote of confidence in the chancellor and Rachel Reeves' apparently distraught personal state were all enough for the UK's credit rating to come under threat. A spokesperson from Downing Street trying to tell journalists that the prime minister had confidence in the chancellor after the fact was simply not enough. This was doubly true when various bits of spin about it being a personal matter or a row with the Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle were offered as explanation for the tears. As the front pages began to drop with pictures of Reeves and questions over whether Sir Keir backed her on them, the prime minister had to reassert his authority and personally give his chancellor his support. Without that, his big speech on NHS reform today would have been a sidenote to a story about a government that was in a state of collapse. It was always planned for him to do interviews to mark his first year in office, but the one with BBC's podcast Political Thinking with Nick Robinson gave an early opportunity to help fix the self-inflicted damage and restore order. He has now effusively given Reeves his backing, which will not please many Labour MPs and now may make it difficult to remove her if he was so minded. However, he has at least restored some semblance of order given himself some breathing space to work out how he is going to wrestle back the political agenda from his fractious backbench MPs.


The Independent
15 minutes ago
- The Independent
Closely watched US jobs report likely to show hiring slowed in June
The steady slowdown in U.S. hiring likely continued in June as President Donald Trump's trade wars, federal hiring freeze and immigration crackdown weighed on the American job market. When the Labor Department on Thursday releases job numbers for last month, they're expected to show that businesses, government agencies and nonprofits added 115,000 jobs in June, down from 139,000 in May, according to a survey of forecasters by the data firm FactSet. The unemployment rate is expected to have ticked up to 4.3%, which would be the highest since October 2021 but still low enough to suggest that most American workers continue to enjoy job security. The U.S. job market has cooled considerably from red-hot days of 2021-2023 when the economy bounced back with unexpected strength from COVID-19 lockdowns and companies were desperate for workers. So far this year employers have added an average 124,000 jobs a month, down from 168,000 in 2024 and an average 400,000 from 2021 through 2023. Hiring decelerated after the Federal Reserve raised its benchmark interest rate 11 times in 2022 and 2023. But the economy did not collapse, defying widespread predictions that the higher borrowing costs would cause a recession. Companies kept hiring, just at a more modest pace. But the job market increasingly looks under strain. A survey released Wednesday by the payroll processor ADP found that private companies cut 33,000 jobs last month. 'Though layoffs continue to be rare, a hesitancy to hire and a reluctance to replace departing workers led to job losses last month,' said ADP chief economist Nela Richardson. (The ADP numbers frequently differ from the Labor Department's official job count.) Employers are now contending with fallout from Trump's policies, especially his aggressive use of import taxes – tariffs. Mainstream economists say that tariffs raise prices for businesses and consumers alike and make the economy less efficient by reducing competition. They also invite retaliatory tariffs from other countries, hurting U.S. exporters. The erratic way that Trump has rolled out his tariffs — announcing and then suspending them, then coming up with new ones — has left businesses bewildered. Manufacturers responding to a survey released this week by the Institute for Supply Management complained that they and their customers were reluctant to make decisions until they understood where Trump's tariffs would end up. 'That whiplash has to stop and it has to stay stopped,' said Susan Spence, chair of the ISM's manufacturing survey committee. Trump's assault on the federal bureaucracy could also show up in June's job report. Nancy Vanden Houten, lead U.S. economist at Oxford Economics, expects federal jobs dropped by 20,000 last month, 'reflecting a hiring freeze, voluntary quits and retirements.'' For now, she wrote in a commentary Wednesday, court rulings 'have put massive federal layoffs on hold.'' The president's deportations — and the threat of them — also are likely to start having an impact on the job market by driving immigrants out of the job market. In May, the U.S. labor force — those working and looking for work — fell by 625,000, the biggest drop in a year and a half.


Scottish Sun
21 minutes ago
- Scottish Sun
Sheff Weds crisis as ‘SIX stars hand in their notice' after wages not paid and club ‘battle to avoid full-scale mutiny'
There is interest in buying Wednesday from several big football figures SALARY MEN Sheff Weds crisis as 'SIX stars hand in their notice' after wages not paid and club 'battle to avoid full-scale mutiny' SHEFFIELD WEDNESDAY's financial crisis deepened after six stars reportedly handed in notices over unpaid wages. The Championship club are in crisis mode with owner Dejphon Chansiri refusing to inject any more cash into the coffers. 2 Six Sheffield Wednesday players have handed in their notices over unpaid wages Credit: Getty 2 Dejphon Chansiri is refusing to put any more of his money into the club coffers Credit: Getty And unpaid players are raging after being left out of pocket for several months. SunSport exclusively revealed how upset stars have asked the EFL to send them money, with Wednesday now banned from buying players until 2027. Out-of-contract stars like Barry Bannan have also left Hillsborough after seeing their deals expire. And now, the Telegraph claims that six players have handed in their notices over unpaid wages from May and June. READ MORE IN FOOTBALL TOTTENHOME Tottenham announce major change to stadium as iconic landmark returns All squad members are able to hand in a 15-day notice period to terminate their contracts. It's currently unknown which six stars have decided to head down that route. But with dissent growing, more could follow in the coming days as Wednesday 'battle to avoid a full-scale mutiny.' Even manager Danny Rohl has not turned up for pre-season, with the gaffer said to be nearing a severance deal. BEST FREE BETS AND BETTING SIGN UP OFFERS Assistant boss Henrik Pedersen is in line to replace him, but only if he receives assurances over several details. And elsewhere, clubs including Southampton and Norwich are still reportedly owed fees for deals dating back to 2022. Sheffield Wednesday crisis deepens as players free to resign, club legend leaves and staff going months without pay It now looks likely that Wednesday will be hit with a major points penalty for the new Championship season. But whether Chansiri is still at the helm remains to be seen amid growing takeover interest. An American consortium has already seen an offer of £48million turned down. While former Crystal Palace chief John Textor is interested in making a bid. Even former owner Milan Mandaric has jetted to Sheffield in a bid to save his old side from going under. And for now, the future of Wednesday appears uncertain.