Dickens
MaizieD
Sago
We have friends that are poised to leave if Labour get in.
Our daughter,SIL and grandchildren will also be very likely to leave.
The people they employ in the home and garden, local dry cleaners, car valeters, butchers, fishmongers, restaurants, tailors etc will all suffer as a result.
The money wealthy people put into the local economy needs to be taken into account.Where do they intend to go, Sago?.
I've always understood that 'capital flight' is, looking at past evidence, largely a bogey man rather than a reality.I've always understood that 'capital flight' is, looking at past evidence, largely a bogey man rather than a reality.
I can't find it now, but there was a 'study' done on this.
The reality was that most did not leave, and the reasons were family, culture and an established business.
Even if you are rich, it's quite a big thing to uproot your roots completely.
I was looking for that, too, but couldn't find the right search terms.
I'm sorry if Sago is going to lose some close contact with some friends and family as a result of Labour winning the election, but if Labour then start a programme of very significant investment in public services, which would include enhancing pay for the poorly paid and lifting levels of benefits, then the amount of extra money entering the domestic economy could well compensate for the loss of that currently input by those friends and family members.
What Labour doesn't need to do is to raise taxes to 'pay' for it's increased investment as properly targeted investment will inevitably increase the tax take.
What it also needs to do is to arrange the tax and regulatory system so that the wealthy cannot accumulate more wealth so easily. Despite GSM's assertions the 'rich' are not the lifeblood of a thriving economy. It is the poorer paid who have the greater propensity to spend and stimulate economic activity in the domestic economy.


