Estate Agents In York

Friday, June 7, 2019

Vote-grabbing gimmicks put pensions at risk | Letters

David Blake, Edmund Cannon and Ian Tonks criticise James Brokenshire’s idea to let first-time buyers dip into pension funds for a deposit on a home, while Sue Ferns says we are still a long way off gender equality in pensions

We view with deep misgivings the suggestion by James Brokenshire that first-time buyers be allowed to dip into their pension funds to help them get a deposit on a home (Report, 4 June). There is considerable evidence suggesting that people save too little for their old age. Without an increase in the supply of housing, enabling young people to use their pension fund for house purchases will only result in bidding up house prices, largely benefiting existing homeowners.

The recent policy of auto-enrolment has been a success in increasing the number of people saving for a pension: it followed a long period of consultation and gained cross-party support. In contrast, off-the-cuff suggestions such as Mr Brokenshire’s risk undermining the pension system. We have been here before: George Osborne’s sudden abolition of the compulsory annuity requirement in 2014 has undermined the annuity market without providing any satisfactory replacement. As we predicted, that policy change resulted in some pensioners losing money after being mis-sold unsuitable financial products. Unless we can find ways to insulate the UK pension system from vote-grabbing gimmicks, there is a significant risk that future generations will have inadequate pensions in their old age.
David Blake Professor of finance, Cass Business School
Edmund Cannon Professor of economics, University of Bristol
Ian Tonks Professor of finance, University of Bristol

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from Property | The Guardian http://bit.ly/2IvhhNV
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The skyscraper infinity pool – sorry, but where's the diving board?

It is meant to be a boundary-busting ‘punch for the sky’. But this design for a rooftop London pool is just another high-rise ego gimmick

In 1924, Buster Keaton approached the Life magazine film critic Robert E Sherwood, to write a script set on an under-construction New York skyscraper. In it, Keaton’s character is showing the architect’s daughter the views from the top when a strike is called, workers down tools, power is cut from the lift and the pair find themselves stranded. Like a modernist Robinson Crusoe, the plot then follows the pair trying to get attention from people in nearby buildings to no avail before building a shelter, and developing strategies to catch rainwater to drink and pigeons to eat.

It came to mind today when I saw the CGI renders of Infinity Pool, a speculative-proposal-cum-clickbait-marketing-stunt from swimming pool designer Compass Pools. The alluring images show the entire roof of an unnamed central-London tower given over to an infinity pool, with no apparent means of escape, as if the digital people are in some kind of sublime prison cell for the super rich. We are assured there is in fact a way in and out, courtesy of a “rotating spiral staircase which rises from the pool floor”, and that this is an entirely buildable proposition that includes an inbuilt anemometer to “vary the water level and access to the pool”.

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from Property | The Guardian http://bit.ly/2K66sF1
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Let’s move to Bognor Regis, West Sussex: it’s used to being the butt of jokes

The seaside resort, whose name was immortalised by George V, is ripe for reinvention

What’s going for it? Bognor is still waiting for its Brighton moment. Or its Margate moment. Even an Eastbourne moment would do. A House of Lords report demands that seaside resorts reinvent themselves, and Bognor’s local council has promised future creative digital hubs and, doubtless, co-working spaces and yuzu juice for all. Bognor is a curious beast. To the east, Butlin’s. To the west, the private estates and get-orf-my-land of Aldwick Bay. In the middle, a humdrum town centre. Alas, Bognor Regis is used to being the butt of jokes, by fortune of its name, a magnificently British combination of highfalutin Regis, undercut by lavatorial Bognor, perfectly encapsulated in George V’s fabled “Bugger Bognor” cry. The town seems destined for self-mockery and understatement. It stars in Don’t Forget The Driver, the Toby Jones comedy about coach parties; ’nuff said. The International Birdman Competition takes place on its pier, a celebration of plucky, inventive failure. But, dammit, this is where James Joyce wrote part of Finnegans Wake, where William Blake lived. This is where the magnificent Picturedrome is. With form like that, bugger Brighton!

The case against With gumption it could make more of itself. It has the usual seaside despond slapped beside the regal mansions of Aldwick Bay. Butlin’s dominates the town.

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from Property | The Guardian http://bit.ly/2WuopnE
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Let’s move to Bognor Regis, West Sussex: it’s used to being the butt of jokes

The seaside resort, whose name was immortalised by George V, is ripe for reinvention

What’s going for it? Bognor is still waiting for its Brighton moment. Or its Margate moment. Even an Eastbourne moment would do. A House of Lords report demands that seaside resorts reinvent themselves, and Bognor’s local council has promised future creative digital hubs and, doubtless, co-working spaces and yuzu juice for all. Bognor is a curious beast. To the east, Butlin’s. To the west, the private estates and get-orf-my-land of Aldwick Bay. In the middle, a humdrum town centre. Alas, Bognor Regis is used to being the butt of jokes, by fortune of its name, a magnificently British combination of highfalutin Regis, undercut by lavatorial Bognor, perfectly encapsulated in George V’s fabled “Bugger Bognor” cry. The town seems destined for self-mockery and understatement. It stars in Don’t Forget The Driver, the Toby Jones comedy about coach parties; ’nuff said. The International Birdman Competition takes place on its pier, a celebration of plucky, inventive failure. But, dammit, this is where James Joyce wrote part of Finnegans Wake, where William Blake lived. This is where the magnificent Picturedrome is. With form like that, bugger Brighton!

The case against With gumption it could make more of itself. It has the usual seaside despond slapped beside the regal mansions of Aldwick Bay. Butlin’s dominates the town.

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from Home And Garden | The Guardian http://bit.ly/2WuopnE
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Thursday, June 6, 2019

Two-bedroom city centre flats for sale – in pictures

Live in the middle of the action with these urban apartments, from London to Glasgow

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from Property | The Guardian http://bit.ly/2EWnH7R
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What does an energy diagram illustrate? Nottingham Estate Agents

OnTheMarket.com explains Energy Performance Certificates (EPC) and offers tips to save money on fuel bills What does an Energy Performance Certificate (EPC) look like? It’s a little coloured chart which shows how well the property is rated in terms of energy efficiency. The best rating is A (dark green), the worst is G (bright red). […]

The post What does an energy diagram illustrate? appeared first on OnTheMarket.com blog.



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Country diary: garden ants make a beeline for my peonies

Langstone, Hampshire: A symbiotic relationship means the black ants don’t damage the flowers and protect them from harmful insects

At the end of March, small holes began appearing in the balding patch of lawn at the base of my brick-built raised beds, each surrounded by a ring of excavated earth as fine as sawdust. Dug out by black garden ants (Lasius niger), these are portals to a subterranean network of tunnels and chambers housing a queen and her colony of 4,000-7,000 workers.

While the queen remains below ground, the workers forage widely for food, following scent trails laid down by scouts. During the past two weeks they have found my herbaceous peonies irresistible, scaling the two-foot-tall stems to feast on the sweet nectar secreted by the tightly bound flower buds. Oozing from the nectaries at the base of the bud, viscous globules dot the edge of the sepals.

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from Home And Garden | The Guardian http://bit.ly/2Mu61Xc
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