Filter
Exclude
Time range
-
Near
Mini-Budget Incoming? Muhammad Malik Flags Serious Concerns in Explosive Analysis #minibudget #mohammadmalick #pakistaneconomy #budget2026 #pakistannews #currentaffairs #economicupdate #newsanalysis #capitaltv
61
ملک جنگی حالات میں؟ اس سال منی بجٹ بھی آئیگا؟ وفاق قرضے لینے والی مشین۔۔ بجٹ تقریر دھوکہ؟ #Budget2026 #SUNONEWSHD #MiniBudget
91
LOL, so explain how come the market only crashed after her Minibudget was announced? And not a day before? dumbass. She was in power for 49 days because she was a royal fuck up. She is so bad, she was able to cause the market death spirial in a week.
4
Replying to @mikeerwydd1968
You'll find that Thatcher has kickstarted the process and the last Tory government has finalised the demise! #Brexit #Minibudget #PPE #Partygate Selling off public assets Bribery Lies Need more?
1
27
Replying to @robfordmancs
The book is superb but on page 11 you claim the effects of Truss's minibudget lingered in higher interest rates for long after Truss left office. That's not right and should be corrected in future editions-- the "moron premium" was reversed by Hunt and Sunak almost immediately.
11
Replying to @KEdge23
That's rich coming from a Tory boy who supported 14 years of country-wrecking: #Brexit #MiniBudget #PPEScandal #PartyGate Selling off public assets Taking bribes Taxdodging Anything else I forgot? 🤔
1
2
Replying to @spikedonline
@TheSimonEvansX It has been stuck in a timeloop since 1995 with the odd realtime event seeping in such as Liz Truss' minibudget. It is about as funny as a wisdom toothache
5
197
I seem to remember that in Sept 22 a number of Your fellow Ex Tory Ministers were collectively responsible for the Fubar’d Mini Budget @reformexposed #ReformAToryUK #truss #minibudget #CollectiveResponsiblity
A list of countries where debt is rising slower than in the UK: 🇦🇫 Afghanistan 🇦🇱 Albania 🇩🇿 Algeria 🇦🇩 Andorra 🇦🇴 Angola 🇦🇬 Antigua and Barbuda 🇦🇷 Argentina 🇦🇲 Armenia 🇦🇺 Australia 🇦🇹 Austria 🇦🇿 Azerbaijan 🇧🇸 Bahamas, The 🇧🇭 Bahrain 🇧🇩 Bangladesh 🇧🇧 Barbados 🇧🇾 Belarus 🇧🇪 Belgium 🇧🇿 Belize 🇧🇯 Benin 🇧🇴 Bolivia 🇧🇦 Bosnia and Herzegovina 🇧🇷 Brazil 🇧🇳 Brunei 🇧🇬 Bulgaria 🇧🇫 Burkina Faso 🇲🇲 Burma 🇧🇮 Burundi 🇨🇻 Cabo Verde 🇰🇭 Cambodia 🇨🇲 Cameroon 🇨🇦 Canada 🇰🇾 Cayman Islands 🇨🇫 Central African Republic 🇹🇩 Chad 🇨🇱 Chile 🇨🇳 China 🇨🇴 Colombia 🇰🇲 Comoros 🇨🇰 Cook Islands 🇨🇷 Costa Rica 🇨🇮 Côte d’Ivoire 🇭🇷 Croatia 🇨🇺 Cuba 🇨🇾 Cyprus 🇨🇿 Czechia 🇨🇩 Democratic Republic of the Congo 🇩🇰 Denmark 🇩🇯 Djibouti 🇩🇲 Dominica 🇩🇴 Dominican Republic 🇪🇨 Ecuador 🇪🇬 Egypt 🇸🇻 El Salvador 🇬🇶 Equatorial Guinea 🇪🇷 Eritrea 🇪🇪 Estonia 🇸🇿 Eswatini 🇪🇹 Ethiopia 🇫🇯 Fiji 🇫🇮 Finland 🇫🇷 France 🇬🇦 Gabon 🇬🇲 Gambia 🇬🇪 Georgia 🇩🇪 Germany 🇬🇭 Ghana 🇬🇷 Greece 🇬🇩 Grenada 🇬🇹 Guatemala 🇬🇳 Guinea 🇬🇼 Guinea-Bissau 🇬🇾 Guyana 🇭🇹 Haiti 🇻🇦 Holy See 🇭🇳 Honduras 🇭🇺 Hungary 🇮🇸 Iceland 🇮🇳 India 🇮🇩 Indonesia 🇮🇷 Iran 🇮🇶 Iraq 🇮🇪 Ireland 🇮🇱 Israel 🇮🇹 Italy 🇯🇲 Jamaica 🇯🇵 Japan 🇯🇴 Jordan 🇰🇿 Kazakhstan 🇰🇪 Kenya 🇰🇮 Kiribati 🇰🇵 Korea 🇽🇰 Kosovo 🇰🇼 Kuwait 🇰🇬 Kyrgyzstan 🇱🇦 Laos 🇱🇻 Latvia 🇱🇧 Lebanon 🇱🇸 Lesotho 🇱🇷 Liberia 🇱🇾 Libya 🇱🇮 Liechtenstein 🇱🇹 Lithuania 🇱🇺 Luxembourg 🇲🇬 Madagascar 🇲🇼 Malawi 🇲🇾 Malaysia 🇲🇻 Maldives 🇲🇱 Mali 🇲🇹 Malta 🇲🇭 Marshall Islands 🇲🇷 Mauritania 🇲🇺 Mauritius 🇲🇽 Mexico 🇫🇲 Micronesia 🇲🇩 Moldova 🇲🇨 Monaco 🇲🇳 Mongolia 🇲🇪 Montenegro 🇲🇦 Morocco 🇲🇿 Mozambique 🇳🇦 Namibia 🇳🇷 Nauru 🇳🇵 Nepal 🇳🇱 Netherlands 🇳🇿 New Zealand 🇳🇮 Nicaragua 🇳🇪 Niger 🇳🇬 Nigeria 🇳🇺 Niue 🇲🇰 North Macedonia 🇳🇴 Norway 🇴🇲 Oman 🇵🇰 Pakistan 🇵🇼 Palau 🇵🇦 Panama 🇵🇬 Papua New Guinea 🇵🇾 Paraguay 🇵🇪 Peru 🇵🇭 Philippines 🇵🇱 Poland 🇵🇹 Portugal 🇶🇦 Qatar 🇰🇷 Republic of Korea 🇨🇬 Republic of the Congo 🇷🇴 Romania 🇷🇺 Russia 🇷🇼 Rwanda 🇰🇳 Saint Kitts and Nevis 🇱🇨 Saint Lucia 🇻🇨 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 🇼🇸 Samoa 🇸🇲 San Marino 🇸🇹 Sao Tome and Principe 🇸🇦 Saudi Arabia 🇸🇳 Senegal 🇷🇸 Serbia 🇸🇨 Seychelles 🇸🇱 Sierra Leone 🇸🇬 Singapore 🇸🇰 Slovakia 🇸🇮 Slovenia 🇸🇧 Solomon Islands 🇸🇴 Somalia 🇿🇦 South Africa 🇸🇸 South Sudan 🇪🇸 Spain 🇱🇰 Sri Lanka 🇸🇩 Sudan 🇸🇷 Suriname 🇸🇪 Sweden 🇨🇭 Switzerland 🇸🇾 Syria 🇹🇼 Taiwan 🇹🇯 Tajikistan 🇹🇿 Tanzania 🇹🇭 Thailand 🇹🇱 Timor-Leste 🇹🇬 Togo 🇹🇴 Tonga 🇹🇹 Trinidad and Tobago 🇹🇳 Tunisia 🇹🇷 Turkey 🇹🇲 Turkmenistan 🇹🇻 Tuvalu 🇺🇬 Uganda 🇺🇦 Ukraine 🇦🇪 United Arab Emirates 🇺🇸 United States 🇺🇾 Uruguay 🇺🇿 Uzbekistan 🇻🇺 Vanuatu 🇻🇪 Venezuela 🇻🇳 Vietnam 🇾🇪 Yemen 🇿🇲 Zambia 🇿🇼 Zimbabwe That’s according to analysis by the Telegraph. Labour and Conservative governments have brought Britain to the edge of bankruptcy, losing control of public spending and failing to deliver any meaningful economic growth. They’ve left the UK with the highest borrowing costs in the G7, spending more than the education and defence budget combined servicing our debt. A Reform UK Government will save Britain from bankruptcy by finally cutting wasteful spending - on welfare, net zero and migrants - so we can get debt under control and restore confidence in our economy.
12
News Update!! اب ہر مہینے دو مہینے بعد بجٹ آتاہے جو عام آدمی کا بجٹ تباہ کردیتا ہے،حافظ نعیم الرحمن #HafizNaeemUrRehman #JamaatEIslami #InflationInPakistan #MiniBudget #PublicProtest #BreakingNews #UrduNews #PakistanEconomy #JiPakistan #TaxBurden #VoiceOfCommonMan
1
1
6
نیا بجٹ آئی ایم ایف کی مرضی کا؟عوام پر ٹیکس کی بھرمار، حکومت مکمل ناکام؟ محمد اویس ٹیکس ایکسپرٹ کی بجٹ پر اہم گفتگو #newstodaywithmansoorazamqazi #MansoorAzamQazi #PakistanBudget #IMFDeal #Budget2026 #TaxBurden #Inflation #EconomicCrisis #GovernmentFailure #PakistanEconomy #IMFConditions #MiniBudget #FinanceBill #RisingTaxes #PublicReaction #CurrentAffairs #BreakingNews #PakistanPolitics #CostOfLiving #FiscalPolicy #ViralNews #EconomyUpdate
21
آئندہ بجٹ آئی ایم ایف کے ریڈار پر! روزمرہ اشیاءکی آسمان کو چھوتی قیمتیں، کیا عوام کو ریلیف ملے گا؟ #newstodaywithmansoorazamqazi #MansoorAzamQazi #PakistanBudget #Budget2026 #IMF #Inflation #PublicRelief #PakistanEconomy #MiniBudget #EconomicCrisis #IMFConditions #TaxIncrease #PetrolPrices #DollarRate #UtilityBills #MiddleClass #BreakingNews #PakistanNews #BudgetDebate
17
Yesterday afternoon the yield on the UK's 30-year gilt closed at 5.8%. Higher than it reached during the Truss minibudget panic of September 2022, when the same number on the same instrument forced a sitting Prime Minister out of office in 49 days. The number was treated then, by most of the people now in Cabinet, as proof that the Tories had elevated fools to the heights of the cabinet. Which, as it happened, they had. The same number now, under their own watch, is being treated as a passing weather event. Perhaps this is an artifact of the fact that the Metropolitan press has typically given Labour a much easier time of things that it rightfully gave the Tories hell for. Perhaps it's a factor of the feeling that things are so much worse in every sphere of our public life that 2022's stand-out moment of crisis simply feels like a twig tapping on a window in the storm in 2026. Perhaps it's something else entirely. Either way, Liz Truss at least had the courtesy to be honest about the new tax cuts and the new borrowing she was proposing to fund them with. The Starmcabinet has done it in slow stages and while saying nothing about what they're doing. The Sentencing Act, the welfare expansion, the National Insurance raid, the Procurement Reset that has handed billions to the same consultancies the Conservatives were paying to be fucking useless, all wrapped in language so emollient it would render languid a fox in a hen-house. But the market will not be fooled, and it has, as the time has gone by, found the slow version more alarming. Two and a half years after Truss was hanged from a public scaffold over an unfunded promise to grow the economy, the same Treasury, run by the same permanent and unanswerable governing class, is delivering a yield curve worse than hers and being given the courtesy of a Today programme slot to explain why the fundamentals are sound. What that costs the rest of us, away from the Treasury's PowerPoint, is direct. The 30-year gilt is the benchmark for the £1.6 trillion of outstanding UK residential mortgage debt, for the cost of every business loan and car loan denominated in sterling, for the present value of every defined-benefit pension that has not yet bought out its liabilities, and for the price at which any government, of any party, can fund anything it announces between now and 2055. The bond market has, in effect, just taxed the next 30 years of British public life to pay for the failures of the people running the Treasury this quarter. The downstream maths is the part nobody in the Cabinet would be willing to put up on one of their little slides in their little slideshows. UK national debt is £2.7 trillion. Annual debt interest already runs above £100 billion, comfortably more than the defence budget. Five years of a 5% yield on that stock is approximately £270 billion of additional interest payments. That is, by way of comparison, the entire annual cost of the NHS. We are about to spend one NHS, in interest payments alone, on the privilege of having arguably the worst Prime Minister of the post-war era and a Chancellor to match. Reeves will, in due course, be moved to a non-economic brief and shortly afterwards write a book. Miliband will be Treasury swapped and be given an even greater remit to continue his vital work in impoverishing the British taxpayer than he already had in his present portfolio. The Perm Sec class will, as ever, remain right where they are. And the interest charges will sit on Britain's books for as long as my generation has working memory. Nobody, in any of the offices currently making the decisions, will have signed their name against any of it. That's what Starmer meant when he said "the fundamentals are sound" yesterday. But for all of the associated pain, the country owes the bond market a small debt of thanks. In the absence of any other working accountability mechanism in British public life, the price of UK sovereign debt has become the only thing left capable of telling Sir Keir Starmer the truth about himself. He'll, of course, ignore it. The divs who're busying themselves sucking up to his ostensible successors will say unforgivably stupid shite like "the market will have to fall in line" with the next Labour PM. And the whole sorry show will go on until we finally hit the dawn.
4
72
259
13,458
Replying to @pritipatel
When we talk about 'destroying the UK economy', we should mention #Brexit #Minibudget #PPE scandal selling off national infrastructure including the NHS. You were part of that! Shut up!
47
Replying to @trussliz
Oh, boy! Where do we start with this? #Porkmarkets or #Minibudget 🤣🤣🤣
33
It’s true on 22 September 2022, the day before the miniBudget, the Bank confirmed it would commence selling gilts from 3 October. However, it had already set out the plans on 1 September and 4 August, and announced its intention to start selling gilts as far back as 5 May 2022.
9
ajbell.co.uk/group/news/thre…. Here's an article specifically about the mini-budget and the gilts selling, and why it was the minibudget and not the gilts which caused the financial criss. AJ Bell.
1
22
The UK 10-year gilt yield closed at 5.10% on Tuesday. The last time it was that high was July 2008, the month of the Lehman collapse. We have not paid this much to borrow money for almost 18 years. There's no shortage of visible proximate triggers. You've got Brent crude touching $114 a barrel. The Prime Minister is being told by his own backbenches to expect a leadership challenge in days. The Telegraph's weekend splash put the welfare bill at £155 billion, with 16,000 households drawing more than £60,000 a year in benefits. The deeper trigger is the underlying maths. Britain has run a cumulative deficit every year since 2001. The national debt is approximately £2.7 trillion. Annual interest payments on that debt currently run above £100 billion, more than the entire defence budget. Each percentage point that gilt yields rise adds, over a couple of years as the debt rolls, tens of billions to that figure. We're looking at a £1 billion spent on debt interest every three or four days. What sits behind the yield, in plain accounting terms, is 15 years of derelict money management. The two-child cap, the welfare expansion, the energy bill, the bank bailout, the Truss minibudget, the Reeves budget, the Iran exposure, the Streeting-Starmer civil war, the underlying productivity collapse: it sums to price in the gilts. It stems from a fundamental misunderstanding of key laws of monetary physics. Most of the people at working-a-lever level in central government come from an intellectual tradition that believes, in an unexamined and in-earnest fashion, that money and wealth are naturally aborning quantities. Stuff that wells out of the ground, and that the only thing of interest about it is who captures it (the state, which is good; or individuals, who then become billionaires, which is bad). Taking this as axiomatic, it's very easy to understand why the governing class has spent a decade and a half assuming the cost of borrowing was a constant of nature. That every fresh promise could be funded by issuing slightly more debt at slightly higher coupons that someone, somewhere, would always be in a position to buy. Eventually, that assumption will be tested. Every promise made to the British public over the next decade will be conditioned by the rate at which the British state can borrow. A 5% yield is not the end of the world. A 5% yield maintained for five years, on a £2.7 trillion debt, is approximately £270 billion in additional interest costs, which is roughly the entire annual cost of the NHS (or, for a different analogy, the GDP of Nigeria). Those numbers compound until somebody, somewhere, decides they will not. We need a government that will run the place on the basis that the bills are real. Who understand that wealth cannot be taken-for-granted, and must created, and who will rebuild a productive economy that can pay the bills. That can deliver the cheap energy that lowers those bills, and stop the slow programme of welfare expansion that has now produced a transfer system larger than the defence budget and growing faster than the rest of the economy. The bond markets will repay such seriousness of intent and action with cheaper money. They have done so for every country that has ever turned itself around. Britain is not exempt from how this works.
2
15
44
4,333