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    14 commenti

    1. daiwilly on

      Perhaps, Lord Rose, people are sick of the unnecessary daily grind created by the rich classes who seem to think working your fingers to the bone for little pay is a thing to be proud of.

    2. > “We need to make sure that people understand that actually this nation needs everybody to lean in to make a contribution… it’s all our jobs to do it”, he added.

      Once again these people completely fail to understand that there is simply isn’t an incentive to do well in this country. Wages in most sectors are so depressed that many jobs barely take workers above the breadline. Even in higher-earning sectors or positions, the tax burden is so high that you still don’t get to benefit as much as you should. Combined with the fact that public services are breaking down and the job market is terrible, and the fact that Brits seem to have this insidious mentality of scoffing at people who are higher educated or do better than them in life, it feels like we’re collectively destined to go nowhere.

    3. NoTitleChamp on

      Anti benefits and anti remote working, he must be lining up a reform defection.

    4. FlaviousTiberius on

      >He has also spoken out against a rise in sick leave and benefits for Brits, arguing that the nation should ‘lean in’ and get to work.

      A big problem is that there aren’t any jobs. Reeves didn’t help but this was an issue even before that. I remember trying to get a job after graduating during covid and literally couldn’t get anything for well over a year, even absolute bottom of the barrel jobs because there were usually so many people applying.

      People can often lose jobs as their sector buggers off abroad and then basically have nowhere to go, as British companies are allergic to providing any kind of retraining for potential employees and seem to think everyone has thousands of pounds to shell out on courses while also being unemployed on top of somehow having years to spend going back to education.

      Yes some of the benefits stuff has gotten ridiculous but British employers also bear part of the blame.

    5. heresyourhardware on

      Let me guess before reading the article. Make sure tax doesn’t touch wealth for rich city boys, and we need to get people back into the office full time and people pulling themselves up by their bootstraps?

      Edit: yup.

    6. MATE_AS_IN_SHIPMATE on

      The class system creates regressive behaviour.

      Growth and development require collaboration and mutual respect between leaders and workers.

    7. Shmikken on

      Nobody should value the opinion of a “Lord” on anything other than caviar, vintage wine, yachts, etc. They have zero experience of the real world.

    8. ThatGuyMaulicious on

      If we don’t reform the entire welfare state we will be in a crisis.

    9. cornedbeef101 on

      Here’s an idea to generate growth, let’s join a large collaborative trading group. Maybe a single market of our closest neighbours in Europe?

      It could be a union of sorts where we all play to the same rules and benefit from the largest bloc of suppliers and consumers in the world.

    10. Only_Tip9560 on

      Lord Rose, one the architects of the very system that is failing trying to blame working Britons for the state of the nation. How charming.

    11. Slow-Intention-2000 on

      If I dont spend three hours in a train how do I prove I m serious about my job – Type Reform mentality

    12. SkynBonce on

      Who would have thought that decades of strpping back social funding would have a negative impact on society?

    13. steak_bake_surprise on

      Oh look, another multi millionaire, with a ‘Lord’ title, telling us normies what’s wrong with the UK.

    14. Tortoise_247 on

      “Privileged people don’t march and protest; their world is safe and clean and governed by laws designed to keep them happy.” — John Grisham character Michael Brock

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