Os jornais ingleses estão cheios de notícias sobre a revolta dos agricultores que está a fermentar, o encerramento de fábricas com o aumento do salário mínimo e da contribuição para a segurança social, o encerramento de escolas por causa da aplicação do IVA e do aumento da contribuição para a segurança social. O estado inglês está sem dinheiro e precisa de aumentar impostos para se sustentar.
Entretanto:
"Labour's decision to clear the way for a four-day week in the public sector without corresponding reductions in pay or improvements in productivity speaks volumes as to the party's priorities.Angela Rayner, the Local Government Secretary, has withdrawn opposition to South Cambridgeshire council's plan to switch to a four-day week. Sadiq Khan, meanwhile, has offered Tube drivers an identical reduction in working days alongside a 3.8 per cent pay rise.These moves follow on from the decision to award above-inflation pay rises to workers in the NHS without accompanying reforms to improve the woeful performance of the health service. Indeed, across the public sector, productivity today is lower than it was in 1997. Forget benefiting from AI; the workers of the British state have yet to catch up to the advent of broadband internet.It is a potent illustration that, left to its own devices, the public sector will do what is best for itself: deliver minimal performance and minimal effort for maximal pay, insulated from the consequences of failure and cost pressures by its ability to simply extort more money from the taxpayer. The role of elected politicians should be to constrain this self-serving behaviour. With Labour in thrall to its public sector voters, however, any desire to reduce the burden of taxes is of little concern relative to the need to reward its core constituency. The contrast with events unfolding in the United States could not be more marked."
Trecho retirado do Daily Telegraph no dia 10 de Novembro.
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