Top Stories and Blog Review – 7th Jan
Obama speaks; Papers react; UN diplomacy
International
Egypt floats truce plan after school bombs
‘One of the more shocking sentences I’ve read’
Al Qaeda No. 2 blames Obama for Gaza
‘Why do they hate the West so much, we ask’
Apple presents iLife at Macworld swansong
Gas row flares as supplies to Europe cut
Nationwide
Thousands bankrupted over unpaid council tax
Cases have ‘cut UK terror threat’
Britain feels the chill as gas prices soar
Atheist bus campaign goes nationwide
DAILY BLOG REVIEW / by Aaron
The New Humanist recommends Catholic Google. Get all your information kindly censored by your moral overlords.
Craig Murray on Putin’s “remarkably successful” regional bullying. Btw, Craig has a new book out soon.
Charlotte Gore argues that suggesting we nationalise the banks is a bit, well, daft.
Hagley Road to Ladywood on how those on a low income are being squeezed by rising costs – and why is this being ignored by the MSM media?
Sunny Hundal. Sunny’s audio documentary on why British Asian woman are 3-times more likely to commit suicide than average.
Tim Leunig/LDV, an economist at the LSC, explains how he predicted the recent fall in oil prices, and how he expects it to remain stable in ’09.
steerpikelet is writing a piece on incapacity benefit and has some questions for claimants.
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Reader comments
IN Scotland two and a half years ago when the reforms to bankruptcy legislation were going through the Scottish Parliament it emerged that around 1/2 of creditor initiated bankruptcies were commenced by local authorities, in a number of cases for unpaid poll tax. The figure seemed startling then – but seemed a corollary of a decision by local authorities to avoid using traditional debt enforcement mechanisms whereby assets of the debtor (goods or bank accounts) were seized (execution of judgments in England, diligence in Scotland). There was considerable political pressure from the old SSP, the SNP, and the left of the Labour party to avoid using what was perceived as “inhuman and degrading” debt enforcement mechanisms – with the result that bankruptcy was used as the only means of debt recovery – which for the debtor meant seizing all of the assets that could be seized by the usual mechanisms, preventing the obtaining of credit, and effectively seizing assets acquired after bankruptcy (albeit with a discharge of all debts after years).
We don’t have any stats yet on how the reduction of the discharge period from 3 years to 1(mirroring the English reforms of a few years ago) has had on local authority practice, but there has been a massive increase in debtor initiated applications, and reduction in creditor initiated applications (possibly because previously debtor initiated procedures were not straightforward and a helpful creditor may have assisted the debtor to get bankruptcy relief. If that is the case iti is likely that in Scotland the percentage of local authority initiated bankruptcies may overall be reduced, but as a proportion of creditor initiated bankruptcies will probably go up.
Whether similar factors apply in England and Wales I’d be really interested to know if anyone can help.
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