Sal Paradise wrote:Mintball - look at the posters who have raised this issue and look at what they have written - your fella in particular!! I think this change is wrong but its a storm in a teacup and not worthy of the rant some think it justifies.
When it affects someone's life – and their future prospects, as people have illustrated here – then it is worth kicking up a fuss about.
Sal Paradise wrote:Anything that encourages private sector employers to employ people must be a good thing ...
Agreed. But as has been pointed out, there are entirely fair and proper ways to resolve a situation where an employee can't do the job or the company subsequently finds itself in a situation where it needs to lay off staff to survive. This isn't about that.
Sal Paradise wrote:... this is a very tough economic environment right now...
Give me one single example of where an employer has been put off taking on new staff to grow their business because of unfair dismissal legislation as it stands. Just one example.
Sal Paradise wrote:... Unless the government is going to borrow a load money and start some Keynes stylee projects - unlikely - then it is the private sector that must lead the way and government need to encourage this.
As I said – one example of where current legislation has stopped an employer taking on new staff to grow their business.
And yes – of course the private sector has a role to play. Indeed, many senior business types promised that they would create the jobs that would absorb those being made redundant by the cuts that they supported. They have singularly failed to do so. And indeed, as we've seen elsewhere, are actually benefitting from free labour, paid for by you and me. If they needed those jobs doing, they should create proper jobs and fill them. The likes of Tesco can certainly afford to.
But yes, we could do with a touch of Keynes. That was, in effect, how we built a recovery after WWII when we were in an even bigger hole financially than we are now.
And there's no shortage of things that could usefully be built – not least, housing, which we have a serious shortage of and have had for some years.
Because, as I'm sure you're effectively saying, we need to grow our way out of the recession. But since something like 3/4 of the economy is now based on the service industries – from nail parlours to insurance for everything you can imagine to restaurants to shops – we actually need people to have money in their pockets to boost those (private) businesses. So a continued policy of simply slashing jobs is utterly counter productive. Now the state isn't paying a wage for work – it's just paying to put someone out of work and with less money to put back into their local economy. Then when there's less money around for nail treatments and meals out, some at least of those parlours and restaurants will go bust, and that'll be more people on the dole with less money to put back into the local economy. And so on.