Going Down
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Initial release | April 11, 2003 |
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Directors | Alfonso Pineda Ulloa |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 2990046 |
About Going Down
Following a wild party, a teenager (Jay Michael Ferguson) has only a few hours to clean up the house before his parents come home.
Milford Haven: Garden ornament turns out to be live bomb
... They d make sure there was no one on the sands, mind! " Well Pop Morris, who went around delivering lemonade, was Going Down to Broad Haven with his horse and cart and found the shell...
Sticky Vicky: Legendary Benidorm dancer dies aged 80
... It would always end with the lights Going Down before she produced a lit light bulb...
Households to be £1,900 poorer, says think tank
... The Resolution Foundation said this government would set a " grim" new record for living standards Going Down...
Inflation: Not yet party time for our finances
... Falling domestic energy prices are a key reason for the inflation rate Going Down...
Sharp rise in UK firms at risk of going bust, insolvency data shows
... They ve got to make sure they are going to get out of the property what they are putting into it and with house prices Going Down a lot of customers have decided to ease off...
Mixmups: Behind the scenes with the disabled stop motion characters
... As well as a slide Going Down the helter-skelter, there s a lift going up with automatic doors into the garden, and wheelchair accessible swings...
After a year of Elon Musk, what's next for X?
... Those innovations haven t really changed things though - X is still heavily reliant on ad revenue, and worryingly for Mr Musk that is Going Down...
Wales' 20mph speed limit: How has the first month gone?
... Her husband Steve broadly supports the change, although he does say people who commute to Cardiff, Swansea and Newport have to leave half an hour earlier " because there s so much traffic Going Down the valley...
Households to be £1,900 poorer, says think tank
By Tom EspinerBusiness reporter, BBC News
Families will be £1,900 poorer at The End of this parliament compared with The Beginning , a Think Tank has said.
The Resolution Foundation said this Government would set a " grim" new record for living standards Going Down .
It also said Chancellor Jeremy Hunt 's Autumn Statement changes, including a National Insurance cut, handed The Next parliament " implausible" cuts to public sector spending.
But Mr Hunt said the tax cuts would put " more money in people's pockets".
Responding to the Autumn Statement, The Resolution Foundation said that with The Next general election due within The Next year, " this parliament is on track to be The First in which real household disposable incomes have fallen".
The Independent Think Tank , which focuses on improving living standards for those on low to middle incomes, said Mr Hunt's plans " failed to end a wider economic stagnation".
It said people's Purchasing Power had been stagnating for 20 years, and that recent pay rises just reflected the reality of higher inflation.
Despite " tax-cutting rhetoric" and about £20bn of tax cuts announced in the Autumn Statement, there had already been £90bn of tax rises announced by the Government - so taxes are rising by the equivalent of £4,300 per household between 2019-20 and 2028-29, the Think Tank said.
The chancellor managed to make these cuts at the expense of not raising public spending In Line with the pace of general price rises, meaning departments such as justice, local Government and the Home Office face a £17bn budget cut by 2027-28, it added.
The Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR), the Government 's independent economic forecaster, said that the amount of tax households pay would go up in general.
Richard Hughes , The Chair of the OBR, said the tax burden was going up " to its highest level in the post-war era".
" Over The Medium term, The Combination of higher inflation and frozen tax thresholds means that the tax burden for This Country is going up, " He Said .
The chancellor was able to cut certain taxes because he hadn't changed public services spending plans.
This means that Government departments will face a cut in spending power of about £20bn, Mr Hughes said.
" That's roughly equal to the amount of money the chancellor has given way in tax cuts, " He Said .
Speaking to The Bbc on Thursday, Mr Hunt said: " Taxes have gone up, but I want to start bringing them down. "
He Said the Government had been right to help families during the coronavirus pandemic with The Furlough scheme, and with energy bills during the cost of living crisis.
He added that tax rises were not long-term and that after The National Insurance cuts, " there's going to be more money in people's pockets".
Mr Hunt said he had chosen to cut National Insurance to get more people into work, and that the measure would help fill one in 10 job vacancies.
He Said he did not know whether real incomes would be down, but that the pandemic and The Effects of Russia's war in Ukraine had had an impact.
But He Said the Government plans to boost the economy by making business more competitive.
" If we want to bring the tax burden down, we have to grow the economy, " he added.
Related TopicsSource of news: bbc.com