Chilly
Balls of steel
- Joined
- Dec 22, 2003
- Messages
- 9,047
Always rely on Boris for the straight story.God, I love Boris.
Always rely on Boris for the straight story.God, I love Boris.
Also can you imagine how hammered that shop would get from in reputation and in loss of sales from other supermarkets?
If Tescos passed on the VAT cut but Asda didn't - Tescos would have adverts out in a day which would quite simply fuck Asda right over.
For simplicity of the future (since the VAT drop is short term only) and competition-reasons, the vast majority of the retail/service sector will pass on the cut.
Of course the cut itself will do very little but raise confidence - and confidence is simply not enough in the current climate.
Yanks are doing it properly, they are going after the root cause of the problem which is the credit flow, or lack it.
I had to talk to my staff today after the press leaked administration before we could notify all the employees.
I had resigned two weeks ago, dealing with people today made me feel like shit. Had to try and motivate them and make them fight for the companys future. All without telling them I am fucking off on the 15th of Dec.
I think you're being incredibly naive here. I would expect only those retailers in a direct price war with competitors to pass on the VAT saving. An example of these might be the supermarkets.
The vast majority of other retailers will simply keep the same price point and use the saving to boost their margin or allow them to offer more discounts or promotions.
The company I work for is a retailer across Europe and we won't be adjusting our prices in either the UK (for the 2.5% decrease in VAT) or in Ireland (for the 0.5% increase in VAT). The reasoning is that we set prices for each season based on exchange rates, commodity prices and what the product could sell for in comparison to competitors.
If the customer is willing to buy at a particular price point (which our customers appear willing to do as our sales are defying the recession and have been beating budgets every month of this year so far) then why would we go to the hassle of changing prices especially when those changes would change a price from say £99.95 to £97.82. It's only those retailers (e.g. supermarkets) who regularly adjust their prices to these unusual prices that will consider doing so and I bet it won't be an across the board adjustment for those companies either.
This adjustment to VAT isn't the answer to getting the public to spend more but it might help some companies survive which wouldn't otherwise have been able to do so.
I woulda hung in there and got the redundancy personally, but each man makes his own choice.
Good luck to you mate.
Not affected me in the slightest appart from drop in interest rates on savings. At least now i'll finally get round to buying a house in the next 18 months![]()
Uh-huh - I think it has affected you
The health groups are being stupid - theres still much cheaper alcohol available in the supermarkets.
Even people on the dole can still afford to drink themselves to death if they choose so cheaper pints arent an issue.
Anyone know what you get for 99p?
Alcohol Concern says pricing drinks at 1989 levels could cause more people to drink too much and end up in hospital.