Canada’s famously low immigration strategy.
That's the exception. How many students and all their family from third world countries like Pakistan or India does Poland or the other east European countries take?
Canada’s famously low immigration strategy.
That's the exception. How many students and all their family from third world countries like Pakistan or India does Poland or the other east European countries take?
Belgium probably too.
Feels a bit like you’re trying to find an angle to make this about immigration rather than it actually being about immigration. Migrants didn’t cause Liz Truss to play sixth form economics with our money or key workers to get real terms pay decreases over those years.
Just think you have to see that chart in context. And economies too. Germany and the Eurozone not looking too clever at present.
The main context being we’ve had 13 years of the Tories actively trying to make people worse off for their own gain.
Yes, that's Labour's mantra. But, again, in context, I don't see any country in Europe doing better
Every other country on that chart is doing better on that metric and it’s a pretty important metric.
Poverty is a relative concept, definable in different ways. Here's what a spokesperson for the Department for Work and Pensions said:
“There are 400,000 fewer children and 1.7 million fewer people in absolute poverty when compared to 2010.
“But we understand some families are still struggling. This is why we have worked hard to halve inflation and are providing on average £3,700 per household to help with the cost of living, including increasing benefits by over 10 per cent this year.”
If you believe that bollocks I’ve got a Brexit to sell you.
If you believe that bollocks I’ve got a Brexit to sell you.

If it's not true, then before you attempt to sell me anything, show me why it is factually incorrect
Because they’ve intentionally conflated the different definitions of poverty. It’s arbitrarily set at 60% of median income but a median income isn’t stretching as far as it used to and especially not once mortgage/rent inflation is taken into account. Throw in the level of inflation on the stuff poor people actually spend their money on rather than the headline inflation rate and it’s non-sensical to suggest fewer people are in poverty.
Bringing the minimum wage up above inflation is great if you’re on minimum wage but it doesn’t filter through to push all wages up above inflation so the bloke who was on £10/hour is now on £11 but the bloke on £12/hour who has just seen his rent go up 10% isn’t suddenly getting £13.20 to cover it and that’s before stealth taxes which have ****ed us all to some extent.
You've described relative poverty. The DWP refers to absolute poverty. I just wondered how you knew the DWP figures on absolute poverty were incorrect.
Looking like the Tories might ditch Sunak.