Sunday, October 23, 2022

World’s media reacts to Liz Truss’s demise and UK political turmoil

Britain “looks increasingly like an isolated Atlantic island state” instead of an international player, the Washington Post note.

The world’s media has reacted to the resignation of Liz Truss, Britain’s shortest-serving Prime Minister, amid a chaotic political and economic situation for the nation.

The Washington Post’s editorial board has put forward a strategy for Britain to “right itself after Truss”, claiming the nation “looks increasingly like an isolated Atlantic island state” instead of an international player.

It argues the Tories should opt for a figure like Rishi Sunak as new leader, who it says would likely be a “steadier hand” than Ms Truss or Boris Johnson.

“The party should also reform how it chooses its leaders. The current process empowers dues-paying party members, who tend to lean further to the populist right than most Britons,” the board wrote.

The third step involves help from the US and Europe in landing new trade deals and a “softer Brexit”.

“Britain should be more than an exporter of royal gossip and lurid political news,” the paper says.

“The United States and Europe should help Britain regain its place in a liberal global order under attack by Russia, China and other adversaries of freedom.”

The Wall Street Journal’s editorial argues the demise of Ms Truss has lessons for domestic US politics.

Under the headline ‘The Tory warning to US Republicans’, the board writes Ms Truss was “made the scapegoat for failed tax-and-spend policies”.

“Ms Truss resigned as PM Thursday after a fiasco of a premiership, but the fault is far from hers alone,” it continued.

“She is being made the scapegoat for the economic policy blunders that the ruling Conservatives have made over 12 years in power, and especially since 2019 under previous Prime Minister Boris Johnson.”

The Financial Times’ international editorial board writes of the “shattering of the UK’s credibility” and calls for a general election.

“The six short weeks of Liz Truss’s premiership trashed not only the UK’s economic standing but also its reputation for political stability,” the paper states.

“No one, bar a few thousand party members, voted for that.

“The prospect of yet another Conservative prime minister chosen without a general election ignores not only the UK’s growing democratic deficit but also the lack of competence displayed by its woeful government.”

The board argues the next PM should retain Jeremy Hunt as Chancellor to “repair the damage” from a “financial hand-grenade” but continues: “The Conservatives should not be allowed to continue without a new mandate from the voters.”

In Australia, on the eve of Ms Truss’s resignation, an editorial from the Murdoch-owned The Australian declared the Tories had paved the way for a Labour government.

The paper says: “As an influential power and key member of the Western alliance, Britain deserves and needs better.

“The economic and political instability wrought by Ms Truss and her party has been highly damaging. It has handed Labour a path to power that it has not had for many years.”

In Europe, the fiasco made it to the front page of Denmark’s daily broadsheet Jyllands-Posten with the headline: “From triumph to meltdown.”

Spoof job advert for UK prime minister is so accurate it could be real

'The successful candidate must be lacking in integrity, moral fortitude and shame'

Larry & Paul’s recruitment agency has put out an ad for the vacant position of UK prime minister.

Liz Truss was forced to resign from the position on Thursday after just 44 days in the job.

This makes her the shortest-serving Prime Minister in British history.

It comes after one of the most chaotic and tumultuous days ever seen in Parliament.

Wednesday saw Suella Braverman leave her role as Home Secretary, followed by confusion over whether the chief whip had resigned, and reports of bullying and manhandling in the parliamentary lobby over a vote on fracking.

This was after a humiliating few weeks in office which saw the Prime Minister sack her chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng just weeks after he had implemented her financial plan in the government’s disastrous mini-budget.

She then announced that Jeremy Hunt would be the new chancellor, someone who has publicly disagreed with Truss’ economic strategy of tax cuts, and made this clear by putting her mini-budget through the shredder.

Needless to say, most people could probably do a better job at PM, something comedians Larry & Paul have been keen to stress in this video:

 

Entries for ‘things that lasted longer than Truss’ flood in on social media

‘Believe’ by Cher was number one in the UK for five days longer than Liz Truss was Prime Minister.

Liz Truss resigned as Tory leader on Thursday after a chaotic 44 days in office.

She signalled the end of the shortest term by any prime minister following a botched financial statement, the loss of two of her most senior Cabinet ministers and an open revolt by Tory MPs.

Ms Truss fell 74 days short of George Canning’s 118 full days as PM – the Tory statesman died in office from ill health in 1827, and had, until Thursday, held the unwanted record of shortest serving prime minister.

During her 44 full days in No 10, she oversaw the pound plummeting, the cost of government debt soaring and poll numbers plunging before tearing up her “Trussenomics” plans.

Entries for ‘things that have lasted longer than Truss’ have flooded in on social media.

Here’s the pick of the best:

 

UK economic outlook downgraded by ratings agency following political instability

Moody’s said the change in outlook was driven by ‘heightened unpredictability in policymaking’.

The UK’s economic outlook has been downgraded from “stable” to “negative” by the ratings agency Moody’s due to political instability and high inflation.

In a report published on Friday night, Moody’s said the change in outlook was driven by “heightened unpredictability in policymaking amid weaker growth prospects and high inflation” and “risks to the UK’s debt affordability from likely higher borrowing and risk of a sustained weakening in policy credibility”.

Rating agencies rate a country on the strength of its economy and provide governments with a score based on the likelihood that they will be able to pay back debt.

The rating affects how much it costs governments to borrow money in the international financial markets.

According to the agency, an outlook period “typically lasts 12-18 months”.

“Negative”

However, while the UK’s economic outlook has been graded as “negative”, Moody’s credit rating for the UK remains unchanged at Aa3.

The agency said this rating reflects the UK’s economic resilience “despite the weakening in fiscal policy predictability in recent years”.

It added: “The country’s long-standing institutional framework remains strong and will continue to support the UK’s ability to respond to shocks, as seen during the pandemic. Furthermore, the structure of the UK government debt, with a very long average maturity of around 15 years, as well as a deep domestic investor base adds a degree of resilience to the credit profile in the face of shocks.

“The UK’s local and foreign currency country ceilings remain unchanged at Aaa. The three-notch gap between the local currency ceiling and the sovereign rating is driven by the government’s relatively small footprint in the economy, a fairly robust external payments position and a diversified economy.”

It comes as Chancellor Jeremy Hunt vowed to do “whatever necessary” to drag government debt lower after official figures revealed that borrowing swelled to £20 billion in September.

Challenges

The Office for National Statistics (ONS) reported that a jump in debt interest grew borrowing beyond the expectations of economists, laying bare the challenge facing the Chancellor and new prime minister ahead of the fiscal event at the end of this month.

The latest reading for borrowing, excluding state-owned banks, marked the second-highest September on record, only surpassed during the height of the Covid-19 pandemic, the ONS said.

Borrowing in September outpaced the predictions of economists, who had forecast £17 billion for the month, and was significantly above the £14.8 billion estimated by the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) back in March.

Mr Hunt said: “Strong public finances are the foundation of a strong economy.

“To stabilise markets, I’ve been clear that protecting our public finances means difficult decisions lie ahead.

“We will do whatever is necessary to drive down debt in the medium term and to ensure that taxpayers’ money is well spent, putting the public finances on a sustainable path as we grow the economy.”

The recently appointed Chancellor has already reversed a number of key financial policies announced last month by predecessor Kwasi Kwarteng, including plans to scrap the increase in corporation tax to 25 per cent.

The latest ONS data revealed that increased borrowing was driven by £7.7 billion of debt interest payments for the month, reflecting an increase of £2.5 billion compared with the same month in 2021.

It was the highest September interest figure since records began in 1997.

Significantly higher debt interest payments linked to Retail Prices Index (RPI) inflation drove the increase, the ONS said.

PROOF D&I POLICIES REALLY DO INCREASE PRODUCTIVITY
CONTRIBUTOR: Gautam Sahgal, CEO - Perkbox | Published: 23 OCTOBER 2022


Research* has highlighted the importance of effective diversity & inclusion (D&I) in supporting a workforce’s productivity, with 42% of businesses reporting an increase due to improved policies. Despite this, nearly a fifth (17%) of businesses still don’t think it is necessary to improve D&I in the workplace.


A quarter (25%) of those who have taken action have seen a direct correlation between improved policies and increased revenue. The research revealed that 33% of teams are noticeably happier due to improved D&I policies, 32% of teams became more creative and innovative, and 31% are finding it easier to attract new talent.

However, the research suggests a reluctance for further improvement stems from fundamental barriers, including concerns around employee privacy, skills shortages and budget constraints:32% of businesses want to respect their employees’ privacy, and understand they may not wish to share aspects of their personal lives
22% have access to a limited talent pool and are under pressure to hire fast
20% don’t have the budget to hire external consultants to support in improving D&I

Mona Akiki, Chief People Officer at Perkbox comments: “The benefits of creating a workplace which is more inclusive should certainly be incentive enough for action on D&I. But it makes good business sense too. To stand out against competitors, businesses need the best talent, more creative workforces, and the ability to deliver the services that their own diverse customers demand – which D&I naturally supports.”

“To attract and retain that diverse workforce, it’s important that your benefits and rewards package isn’t just a one-size-fits-all offering. Employees deserve maximum choice and the ability to select what is meaningful to them — this will make them feel genuinely valued as individuals, rather than be seen as just another number.”

Supporting D&I across a borderless workforce

Almost two-thirds of businesses (62%) will be increasing the number of remote staff they hire outside of their main country of operations over the next year. D&I is particularly important for these borderless businesses as they begin to benefit from greater diversity in their cultural make up.

Consequently, nearly a third (29%) of businesses have begun encouraging reward and recognition by employees and managers to ensure that colleagues in any location feel acknowledged and part of company culture. However, only 26% provide each employee with a benefits pot that allows them to choose the rewards and support that suit them best.

Gautam Sahgal, CEO of Perkbox states: “To be competitive in the talent market, leaders must create a strong company culture. One which reflects and meets the needs of a modern workforce.

“This becomes increasingly important as more businesses embrace borderless working. With a globally dispersed workforce, businesses need to work harder to ensure their people feel valued and part of something bigger. Key to this will be offering benefits which can be tailored to accurately reflect the modern workforce, as opposed to settling for a one-size-fits-all approach.

“In addition, installing a reward and recognition offering will be critical to showing employees that you see and appreciate their efforts, no matter where they’re working from. ”

Research from Perkbox*
Passengers in fatal Boeing 737 MAX crashes are ‘crime victims,’ US judge says

Reuters Sat October 22, 2022

A US judge in Texas ruled on Friday that people killed in two Boeing (BA) 737 MAX crashes are legally considered “crime victims,” a designation that will determine what remedies should be imposed.

In December, some crash victims’ relatives said the US Justice Department violated their legal rights when it struck a January 2021 deferred prosecution agreement with the planemaker over two crashes that killed 346 people.


Boeing agrees to pay $200 million for misleading the public about the 737 Max


The families argued the government “lied and violated their rights through a secret process” and asked US District Judge Reed O’Connor to rescind Boeing’s immunity from criminal prosecution – which was part of the $2.5 billion agreement – and order the planemaker publicly arraigned on felony charges.

O’Connor ruled on Friday that “in sum, but for Boeing’s criminal conspiracy to defraud the (Federal Aviation Administration), 346 people would not have lost their lives in the crashes.”

Paul Cassell, a lawyer for the families, said the ruling “is a tremendous victory” and “sets the stage for a pivotal hearing, where we will present proposed remedies that will allow criminal prosecution to hold Boeing fully accountable.”

Boeing did not immediately comment.

After the families filed the legal challenge saying their rights were violated under the Crime Victims’ Rights Act, Attorney General Merrick Garland met with some of them but stood by the plea deal, which included a $244 million fine, $1.77 billion compensation to airlines and a $500 million crash-victim fund.

The deal capped a 21-month investigation into the design and development of the 737 MAX following the deadly crashes in Indonesia and Ethiopia in 2018 and 2019.


The families of the victims of the Ethiopian Airlines crash of the Boeing 737 Max jet held a vigil in front of the US Department of Transportation headquarters in Washington, DC on Sept. 10, 2019.

Boeing did not disclose key details to the FAA of a safety system called MCAS, which was linked to both fatal crashes and designed to help counter a tendency of the MAX to pitch up. “Had Boeing not committed its crime” pilots in Ethiopia and Indonesia would have “received training adequate to respond to the MCAS activation that occurred on both aircrafts,” O’Connor ruled.

The crashes, which have cost Boeing more than $20 billion in compensation, production costs, and fines, and led to a 20-month grounding for the best-selling plane, prompted Congress to pass legislation reforming FAA airplane certification.

Boeing wants Congress to waive a December deadline imposed by the legislation for the FAA to certify the MAX 7 and MAX 10. After that date, all planes must have modern cockpit alerting systems, which the 737 planes do not have.

Last month, Boeing paid $200 million to settle Securities and Exchange Commission charges it misled investors about the MAX.