The Socialist

The Socialist 2 December 2009

Climate change: 'Gigantic market failure'

Climate change 'gigantic market failure'

Copenhagen climate change talks


National Health Service: Patient safety not private profit


Youth march for jobs: "A fantastic experience"


Dubai's house of sand crumbles


Chilcot inquiry: Put the warmongers on trial!


Fast news

Yorkshire strikes - the lessons

BA management get tough

Fighting university cuts

Fighting council cuts in Greenwich

Stoke Axiom action continues

Defend the Four!

NUS plans mean students pay


Rally to oppose racist EDL

How mass campaigning closed BNP HQ


Irish Republic: Huge public sector workers' strike against cutbacks

Indonesia: Eyewitness report from Tamil refugee boat


Politics 'illegal' in Lewisham council

Help give a socialist answer to cuts and privatisation


Liverpool council's budget 'black hole': Establishment parties only offer swingeing cuts

 
 
Socialist Party logo Socialist Party on the climate change demo December 2007, pic Paul Mattsson Socialist Party News
Socialist Party Policy statements
Socialist Party contemporary Marxist analysis

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Fast news

Unauthorised greed

THE SUPREME Court ruled last week that the UK's high street banks can continue to apply excessive charges on customers' unauthorised overdrafts. The judgement stops the Office of Fair Trading investigating the fairness of these charges and allows the banks to rake in £2.6 billion in annual profits.

It also means that the banks avoid making an estimated £1 billion in refunds to customers who have been overcharged. Typically a bank will charge £35 or more for a single bounced cheque even though the bank's administration cost could be as little as £2.50.

Millions of bank customers are outraged that banks like Lloyds/HBOS and RBS can rip off struggling customers with impunity, while helping themselves to billions of pounds in 'unauthorised overdrafts' (bailouts) provided by the public purse.

Energy rip-off

THE ONSET of winter is a worrying time for the 4.5 million people living in fuel poverty, who are trying to heat their homes. However, that hasn't stopped the big six UK energy giants ripping off these customers.

It has emerged that the energy suppliers have broken the Ofgem regulator's rules by overcharging six million customers for the cost of pre-payment meters. Ofgem set the maximum cost at £88 but the average charge is over £100 per customer, with Scottish Power charging £108 and British Gas £106 more than those on direct debit schemes.

Between 2006 and 2008, the energy companies overcharged pre-payment customers (typically people whose income is below £13,500 a year - half the national average) some £464 million in 'unjustified charges'.

This year Scottish and Southern Energy made £410.5 million in profits - up 36% on 2008. British Gas made £451 million - or £34 profit per customer - up 43% on 2008, in addition to its 45% rise in profits in 2008. Yet British Gas only cut its bills to customers by a paltry 10% this year.

Afghanistan troop surge

As widely anticipated, US president Barack Obama is sending an extra 30,000 troops to Afghanistan in an attempt to pacify an increasing Taliban insurgency. Britain's PM Gordon Brown is also sending an extra 500 troops to help prop up the discredited corrupt regime of Afghanistan's president Hamid Karzai. Increased troop numbers will only deepen the 'Afghan quagmire', leaving the 'war on terror' likely to continue into the indefinite future.

But as Brown and Obama understand, intensifying military operations will not defeat the Taliban, so behind the scenes Nato is attempting at the same time to negotiate with the insurgents - the very forces that UK and US troops are being sent to fight against.

Meanwhile, the plight of most Afghans is becoming more desperate as they suffer from mass unemployment, poverty and lack of security.

Far from ending the crisis the ongoing occupation will further destabilise the region, and increase the threat of terrorism.


In this issue

Climate change 'gigantic market failure'

Copenhagen climate change talks


Socialist Party NHS campaign

National Health Service: Patient safety not private profit


Youth fight for jobs

Youth march for jobs: "A fantastic experience"


Credit crunch

Dubai's house of sand crumbles


War and occupation

Chilcot inquiry: Put the warmongers on trial!


Socialist Party news and analysis

Fast news

Yorkshire strikes - the lessons

BA management get tough

Fighting university cuts

Fighting council cuts in Greenwich

Stoke Axiom action continues

Defend the Four!

NUS plans mean students pay


Anti-racism

Rally to oppose racist EDL

How mass campaigning closed BNP HQ


International socialist news and analysis

Irish Republic: Huge public sector workers' strike against cutbacks

Indonesia: Eyewitness report from Tamil refugee boat


Socialist Party election campaign

Politics 'illegal' in Lewisham council

Help give a socialist answer to cuts and privatisation


Marxist analysis: history

Liverpool council's budget 'black hole': Establishment parties only offer swingeing cuts


 

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Related links:

Energy:

triangleThem & Us

triangleProfit hungry 'Big Oil' backs climate change deniers

triangleThe government's fractured energy policy

triangleOur Demands

triangleNews in brief

triangleFast news

Afghanistan:

trianglePoppy mania for bosses...

trianglePicture slide show: Marking ten years since the invasion of Afghanistan

trianglePower and terror

triangleConsequences of 9/11: a world turned upside down

Banks:

triangleJP Morgan: banksters at it again

triangleCapitalist crisis: 'Up to half of all Icelandic families are bankrupt'

triangleWhat's wrong with capitalism?

Gas:

triangleThe Tory solution to pensioner poverty?

trianglePrivate ownership, public pollution

triangleThe Nature of the Problem: An Impending Environmental Crisis

Troops:

triangle1972 Derry - "this was murder"

triangleThe Great Unrest 1911

triangleLlanelli railway riots 1911