ChatterBank7 mins ago
Mass Job Losses In The Retail Sector Expected....costs Up £7Bn..
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....yes it's real labour alright.
£2.33bn ENI, simlar for both minimum wage increases and new "environmental" levies on packagin etc.
Is Labour trying to kill off what is left of the high st?
Answers
Not just the high street, you can also add any manufacturing we have left who also have sky high fuel bills and soon our computer industry also due to the additional problem of sky high fuel bills. They simply cannot remain competative on the World market.
But you seem to be expecting a person who had to lie about their CV to be Chancellor to understand that.
Useless the lot of them, not one member of the cabinet has real business experience.
//Recruiters have warned that Rachel Reeves's Budget has has caused a panic in the job market as "tens of thousands" risk being moving abroad.
According to James Reed, chief executive of major recruiter Reed, employers are plotting to shift roles to lower-cost countries, such as India, to cope with the higher costs imposed by the Budget, reports The Telegraph.
Mr Reed stated that companies are looking to relocate jobs overseas to manage the "triple whammy" of rising National Insurance contributions, an increase in the minimum wage and the implementation of enhanced union and workers' rights.
According to Government analysis, the new workers' rights are expected to cost businesses nearly £5 billion annually.//
//On Friday, Deutsche Bank issued a warning note to City clients stating that the Budget would cost the economy 100,000 jobs, both in redundancies and new roles not created that otherwise would have been.//
//Neil Carberry, the chief executive of the Recruitment and Employment Confederation also shared to The Telegraph that he has been in talks with the bosses about moving jobs out of Britain in the wake of the Budget.
He said: "I have talked to many larger firms where the question has been about offshoring."
In her record-breaking tax-raising Budget on October 30, Ms Reeves announced a flagship policy of increasing employer National Insurance contributions by £25 billion starting next spring.
From April, the rate will rise from 13.8% to 15% - and the salary threshold for employers to begin paying the tax will be lowered.
This National Insurance hike will coincide with a larger-than-expected 6.7% increase in the National Living Wage.
Additionally, companies will face increased costs due to Labour's Employment Rights Bill.//
That is how you kill a thriving economic model and create a left wing wilderness of ideas and innovation.
//Forgot to add, the supermarkets are mainly responsible for mass unemployment due to self service checkouts.//
You really think so?
Checkout staff only ever accounted for a small proportion of supermarket staff- there are lots of shelf stackers, click and collect staff picking orders, warehouse staff, drivers, cleaners, supervisors/managers, security staff, buyers, IT staff...
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