We're talking buisness not personal loans.. the two are different. Either way Paying off debts do with you're income is different than paying off a Wonga loan... with one youre fine. With the other you're debt spirals out of control and you're on the street.It is a ciurcular argument from you or whoever I was replying to. Arguing whether it is coming from the loan or the tax means nothing. If I pay my credit card from my wages but then use the credit card when the wages run out then you can argue it came from my wages if you want but to me I paid for it with the money I had then to borrow at the end of the month.
The circular part was you said the government were buying a loan with your loan. Yeah that's servicing debt which is standard practice but doesn't tell you why they took the loan in the first place which is either to expand its income or bail out a bad budget in the case of the government Mostly the later in terms of our current economic problems.
There are reasons to take short term loans to cover running costs such as to cover short term drops in income that will recover where it would be more expensive/problematic to reduce and then build up your buisness again.
For the government tax is their income. By investing in wages they both create stable jobs and generate buisness which in turn provides more taxes, more income, for the government.
If they take a loan then the interest will likely offset the tax increase.
This is the reason it is beneficial for the government and the UK people to have the government pay tax credits up to the point it no longer proves profitable for the government to do so. The rest should be covered by minimum wage up to a liveable standard and paid for by the company. This maximises growth of jobs, wages and economy.
