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Effect of Brexit

Discussion in 'Watford' started by Davylad, Mar 26, 2016.

  1. DMD

    DMD Eh? Forum Moderator

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    ....and off he buggered. :emoticon-0128-hi:
     
    #2261
  2. superhorns

    superhorns Well-Known Member

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    Don't spoil his fairy story world!!:emoticon-0140-rofl:

    He cannot compete in the real one.
     
    #2262
  3. superhorns

    superhorns Well-Known Member

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    No such problem of property values dropping in the UK, with a surprising hot spot!!

    UK's number one property hotspot is... Luton! Town's proximity to London and good transport links see prices surge by almost 20% in a year
    • House prices have risen £42,000 in a year in the Bedfordshire town
    • Property prices surged 19.4 per cent, more than twice as fast as UK average
    • Twelve years ago Luton was voted the worst place to live in book Crap Towns
    • Halifax said the ten areas with the biggest house price rises were all in London and the South East
    By Sarah Meddings City Correspondent For The Daily Mail

    PUBLISHED: 01:24, 30 December 2016 | UPDATED: 09:04, 30 December 2016



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    Luton had the dubious honour of being voted the worst place to live in Britain in a 2004 book.

    But in a major turnaround, the Bedfordshire town has become an unlikely property hotspot – with house prices rising £42,000 in a year.

    Property values there surged by 19.4 per cent in the last year, more than twice as fast as the UK average and higher than anywhere else in the country.

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    Property values in Luton surged by 19.4 per cent in the last year, more than twice as fast as the UK average and higher than anywhere else in the country

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    Halifax, Britain’s biggest mortgage lender, said the ten areas with the biggest house price rises were all in London and the South East

    Average prices climbed from £214,934 to £256,636, according to lender Halifax.

    It’s a far cry from 12 years ago, when the town made the topspot in a list of worst UK places to live published in the frankly-titled tome Crap Towns.

    Since then the area has evidently grown popular with commuters thanks to its proximity to the capital and good transport links including Luton airport.

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    +4
    Luton's standing is a far cry from 12 years ago, when the town made the topspot in a list of worst UK places to live published in the frankly-titled tome Crap Towns

    Central London is just half an hour away by train, and Cambridge – a major employer thanks to its university and growing technology sector – is an hour’s drive by car.

    And while Luton has seen a dramatic increase in house prices, it is still far cheaper than areas closer to London. Halifax, Britain’s biggest mortgage lender, said the ten areas with the biggest house price rises were all in London and the South East.

    Barking and Dagenham, Basildon and Tower Hamlets were all on the list, with rises well above the national average.

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    +4
    The area has evidently grown popular with commuters thanks to its proximity to the capital and good transport links including Luton airport

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    Martin Ellis, housing economist at Halifax, said: ‘Most of the areas that have seen the biggest house price rises during 2016 are either within close commuting distance of the capital or in outer London.

    ‘Demand in these areas has risen as substantial property price rises in central London over the last few years have caused increasing numbers of people to seek property in more affordable areas.’

    Overall, Halifax said average UK house prices rose by 7.5 per cent in the last year.

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    Halifax said the ten areas with the biggest house price rises were all in London and the South East

    It was a different picture for the North and Scotland, where in some areas prices fell dramatically. Aberdeen topped the list of the biggest casualties, where £15,017 has been wiped off the value of the average house.

    The city is heavily dependent on the oil and gas sector which has been hit by a collapse in the oil price. That has led to thousands of job losses, weighing heavily on Aberdeen’s economy.

    The average house price fell 6.9 per cent to £203,425. Bangor in Northern Ireland, Inverness and Blackpool also saw falls.

    Another report from Nationwide relating to the last three months echoed the North-South divide.

    East Anglia topped the table with house prices up 10.1 per cent to £218,544. In contrast, house prices in the North rose just 0.1 per cent to £124,284 over the same period. Robert Gardner, Nationwide’s chief economist, said: ‘Affordability has improved in Scotland, the North, East Midlands and Northern Ireland over the past ten years.

    ‘By contrast – in London and the South East – more people have found themselves priced out of the market.’

    While prices have risen sharply over the last 12 months, Halifax said next year could see them pick up at a much slower pace. It said annual house price growth would be between 1 and 4 per cent by the end of next year – far below this year’s spike.

    The lender said it was likely the economy would soften over 2017, and lower levels of house sales would occur as people responded by not buying or moving home.

    Activity in the buy-to-let sector is also likely to cool further in 2017 as tax changes hit landlords’ profits.

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    #2263
  4. colognehornet

    colognehornet Well-Known Member

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    You would have to pay me 300,000 to live in Luton.
     
    #2264
  5. superhorns

    superhorns Well-Known Member

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    Why, too many migrants?
     
    #2265
  6. yorkshirehornet

    yorkshirehornet Well-Known Member

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    Do you have to compete all the time??

    Another interesting revelation
     
    #2266

  7. Bolton's Boots

    Bolton's Boots Well-Known Member

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    Is that per year - or would that just be enough to buy a house?

    Up here that would probably buy you two...
     
    #2267
  8. superhorns

    superhorns Well-Known Member

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    wow!
     
    #2268
  9. colognehornet

    colognehornet Well-Known Member

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    The reason why so many migrants go to Luton is that the language there is very easy to learn. Consisting of a more limited vocabulary and frequent repetition of such phrases as 'innit', or 'watchoo lookin at ?', or 'is you startin on me', or '**** off mate'. The range of vocab outside of this is strictly limited. This makes intregration very simple and offers migrants a short cut into the English language.
     
    #2269
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  10. Bolton's Boots

    Bolton's Boots Well-Known Member

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    Well that should have a very positive effect on English Education's performance in the PISA tables. The two countries that regularly top the tables, Finland and South Korea, do so because their written languages are phonetic, enabling children to learn them more quickly - and then concentrate on learning the 'academic stuff' at an earlier age...
     
    #2270
  11. Hornet-Fez

    Hornet-Fez Well-Known Member

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    Migration Watch UK? An organisation with an agenda, a right wing "think tank", hardly a bastion of independent thought and reporting. Thus you leave yourself open to accusations of propaganda. Not entirely surprising.
     
    #2271
  12. Bolton's Boots

    Bolton's Boots Well-Known Member

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    https://skwawkbox.org/2016/12/30/pr...al&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_campaign=buffer

    First time I've heard of this - it alleges that Farage applied for German citizenship the day after the EU referendum, and is now 'in trouble' with the German authorities for providing false information to back up his application.

    Which explains why he is cosying up with Trump - hoping to stay as far out of reach as possible...
     
    #2272
  13. superhorns

    superhorns Well-Known Member

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    The title of the organisation should give everybody a clue to their aims. This does not necessarily detract from the accuracy of the information. It is very hard to find any report that is truly independent, most are biased to some degree.
     
    #2273
  14. superhorns

    superhorns Well-Known Member

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    Definitely a left wing propaganda story!!
     
    #2274
  15. oldfrenchhorn

    oldfrenchhorn Well-Known Member Forum Moderator

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    I saw pictures in the press here showing Farage going into the office to make his application. There was plenty of comment from the public about him being two faced. As it could have been propaganda I didn't report it here. Now that it is shown to be more than that he has to be fair game. Of course there will be his little sycophants who cannot see what a toad he actually is. All publicity is good publicity is it now Farage? Man of the year? It seems to be going downhill fast.
     
    #2275
    Last edited: Dec 30, 2016
  16. superhorns

    superhorns Well-Known Member

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    Both the Independent and the Guardian rightly rubbished this story which died back in August. Just shows you can fool some of the people all the time.

    I'm not surprised the French also fell for it.
     
    #2276
  17. oldfrenchhorn

    oldfrenchhorn Well-Known Member Forum Moderator

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    How very strange that the story died in August, while the police confirm that it is ongoing in October. The papers said that Ukip rubbished the story, not that they did.
     
    #2277
  18. superhorns

    superhorns Well-Known Member

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    They dropped the story as soon as they realised there was no basis. He was entitled to be in the German Embassy because his wife is German. I'm not sure why you think he should be disqualified from applying anyway. His job is done. He is the most successful UK politician since Thatcher. With his relationship with Trump he could become the UK's most precious asset.
     
    #2278
  19. oldfrenchhorn

    oldfrenchhorn Well-Known Member Forum Moderator

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    You have been taking too much Lemsip. He wants to take away peoples rights while protecting his own. Typical of the man. He is a hypocrite.
     
    #2279
  20. superhorns

    superhorns Well-Known Member

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    He is definitely guilty of patriotically putting his country first which is why he is very popular in the UK. He left a lucrative career to donate much of his life to change the UK for the better. He will be long remembered for his success well after the other recent pygmy politicians. He certainly wants to limit the rights of Eastern Europeans to flood into the UK.

    Nigel Farage was named 'Briton of the Year' 2014 by The Times. He was shortlisted for the 2016 Time magazine 'person of the year'

    Why there's no question Nigel Farage is our Man of the Year, says LEO MCKINSTRY
    WINSTON Churchill, our greatest national leader and the epitome of courage, once made the exhortation: “Never, ever give in. Never yield to the apparently overwhelming might of the enemy.”
    By LEO MCKINSTRY
    PUBLISHED: 07:12, Thu, Dec 29, 2016 | UPDATED: 08:19, Thu, Dec 29, 2016
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    Ex-Ukip leader Nigel Farage has had one of his most successful years in 2016
    Throughout his career that advice has been followed by Nigel Farage, the heroic architect of Brexit. His campaign to free Britain from the clutches of the EU’s misrule was often a lonely one.

    The long fight for the restoration of British sovereignty brought him abuse, vilification and even physical attack.

    In taking on the vast, malignant alliance of the Brussels bureaucracy, the British political establishment and the proEU media, he was constantly portrayed as a marginalised, extreme figure.

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    Typical of this fashionable sneering was David Cameron’s 2006 description of Ukip as “a bunch of fruitcakes, loonies and closet racists”.

    But Farage kept going, driven by an instinctive sense of patriotism that the self-regarding elitists could never understand. Against all the knowing conventional wisdom, he ultimately prevailed last summer with the triumphant referendum vote for Brexit.

    The victory was a monument to his tenacity. Through his leadership he not only liberated our nation from EU subjugation but he also smashed the suffocating progressive orthodoxy that has wreaked such damage.
     
    #2280

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