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What we need now is to hold our nerve

THE Bank of England’s latest fix to our economy – that is quantitative easing or, to some of us, the printing of money – is now under way.Read

The risks are high on printing money

IT would appear that we are all now familiar with the benefits of Quantitative Easing, or at least those of us who do not assume it is the latest diet fad. However, while it would appear that this is the latest ‘fix’ to our economic recession, it is far from being the panacea that politicians would have us believe.Read

Sell off these ‘national’ works to reinflate the UK economy

THE news that a painting by Titian has been “saved” for the country at a cost of £50m hardly fills me with delight or enthusiasm. This piece of work by a Venetian artist has been described as “part of our heritage”, a statement I am struggling to understand given the nationality of the artist.Read

Capitalism has served us so well

THE collapse of yet another major financial institution will heighten the debate as to whether we are witnessing the last days of Capitalism as the economic base of Western Society.Read

Rise in holidays at home

ONE of the joys and strengths of the English language is its ability to change, to adapt, to reflect changing society and to harness new words.Read

Listen up – we are not in recession

AS there is a reduced amount of news in what is usually referred to as the silly season, it is perhaps not surprising that there is a concentration on a narrow range of events, and perhaps too much time for thought and debate that is not good for some issues.Read

Health and safety or just pure farce?

THE march of regulation becomes ever more stifling as we see interpretations of legislation, however well meaning in its initial intent, that seem ludicrous in their execution.Read

These oil prices don’t add up

I KNOW that the style of mathematics has changed greatly since whatever I was forced to learn in this context was hammered in to me, but surely some basics remain unchanged.Read

Are you losing out on your petrol claims?

In all of the column acres of opinion and comment on the increasing fuel prices there is one issue that has been given little if any coverage, yet it it affects the majority of those individuals who have to make their vehicles available for the benefit of their employer.Read

Let’s hear it for good service ...

OVER the years I have to accept that I have often been critical of the levels of service and attitude provided by Government departments and their various agencies.Read

Bill Midgley column

The term "old curmudgeon" is one that has been used about me far too often, and I have to say that I do object to the use of the word old.Read

Bill Midgley column

One of the organisations of which I am chairman has, over the past two years, won two awards for being classed as a Top 100 Employer in a nationwide review of 65,000 organisations and businesses.Read

Bill Midgley

It would appear that the graduates from the "Academy of the Patently Obvious" have been at it again.Read

Bill Midgley

One of the phrases that is often thrown out by Government and its subsidiary organisations is that of "joined up Government".Read

Bill Midgley column

The half-yearly results announced recently by Tesco seem to have created something of a furore.Read

Bill Midgley column

Many more columns will undoubtedly be written regarding migrant labour and the impact that it has upon both the UK's economic and social structure.Read

Bill Midgley column

I must have reached an age where those telephone calls from firms of head-hunters no longer happen; not, I have to say, that there were very many of them even in younger days.Read

Bill Midgley column

If I continue to travel to London as often as I do then I shall be accused of having a southern bias rather than that of my northern homeland. But such trips do have some illuminating experiences and perhaps there are some lessons from them that can be learned so far as our own region is concerned.Read

Bill Midgley column

I had often wondered why so many people in London seem to be walking to work in trainers.Read

Bill Midgley

The issue of immigrant labour, be that from illegal immigration from the European Union or asylum seekers, is an extremely emotive one, and far be it for me in these notes to make a comment on the rights or wrongs of the situation.Read