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I would like to see a calculation of the net effect of cycle lanes and cycling. Where I used to live, in Cheshire, it was common to see a line of cars stuck behind cyclists, and therefore polluting more.You should try here where a major A-Road now has cycle lanes despite both highly wide pavements being marked as shared use, it means cycles have more tarmac than motor vehicles, busses struggle to pass each other without straying into the cycle lane and motorcycles can't filter (and it is a major commuting route. All because transept are local and they could get hold of EU money for the road resurfacing if cycle lanes were put in, so it saved the council money from their budget)
From schoolboy economics I recall that fags, booze and fuel were the economic cash-cows, due to inelastic demand.After the smoking ban and the uptake of efags the must have been considerable loss of revenue. Did the uncumbent government do anything to replace the loss of tax receipts? I can’t find any figures on this.
Are you aware that if EV drivers don't charge their cars, they won't pay for electricity?
The problem being is that there is no policy, just a series of ad-hoc measures and promises, to which local councils usually pay minimal lip service.I would like to see a calculation of the net effect of cycle lanes and cycling. Where I used to live, in Cheshire, it was common to see a line of cars stuck behind cyclists, and therefore polluting more.
Cycle lanes often slow traffic as you said.
No tax on EVs is a temporary concession that will not last if EVs become the norm. Given the space given to cycle lanes and their usual emptiness they probably require more infrastructure per user or per person mile travelled. They similarly cause a disproportionate amount of congestion in some places, as I said above.
I also do not understand what you mean by "equivalent motorists"
That is like saying if users of petrol cars never buy petrol they will not pay fuel duty.
I've already stated that in theory I don't have a problem with it.You may not agree with cyclists being taxed, but the more people who use them in lieu of cars, the more incentive there is for governments to tax them. Infrastructure will need to be there to support them, so those who use it should pay for it.
I do think taxation is overcomplicated though. Why pay tax on buying a car, then tax on charging/fueling it, and then tax on using it. The tax system is compounded upon compounding continuously.
ow do we ring fence Rees-Moggs wealth in order to protect ourselves against communism?
I always ride on the pavement for my 10 minute cycle to work for exactly that reason but dismount and step aside for the occasional pedestrian. I'm big enough and ugly enough to avoid challenges from those who holler 'you shouldn't be riding on the pavement', but would like to see some legislation and guidance that allows folk to do so in certain circumstances., who ride on the pavement where possible - they’re probably terrified of riding on the overcrowded roads and where there’s no decent provision for bikes, I don’t blame them!
This is definitely a problem. The vast majority of those polluting vehicles (from what I see) are two tons of metal box with one single occupant, an empty armchair and an empty sofa!Where I used to live, in Cheshire, it was common to see a line of cars stuck behind cyclists, and therefore polluting more.
A lot of car use is for journeys that could not be done on bicycles. Can I cycle to London, or Cheshire, let alone St Andrews? Can I bring my shopping back from the supermarket on a bicycle? Very few of my car journeys could be done by bicycle. The last one was a 20 minute drive each way by car, it would be an hour and 20 minutes by bicycle. This is a journey I do once or twice a week.This is definitely a problem. The vast majority of those polluting vehicles (from what I see) are two tons of metal box with one single occupant, an empty armchair and an empty sofa!
The last time the Tories tried to simply tax, the manual went from 2,000 pages to 20,000! And the number of loopholes increased exponentially...!According to this, the UK's tax system is the 11th most complex in the world:
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UK’s Tax and Accountancy system named 11th most complex in Europe
Learn about the complexity of the UK's tax & accountancy system, ranked as the 11th in Europe. Gain insights into challenges & implications.www.internationalaccountingbulletin.com
Perhaps Boris's successor could simplify it. I'm sure we all agree that would be a good thing.
A lot of car use is for journeys that could be shared.A lot of car use is for journeys that could not be done on bicycles. Can I cycle to London, or Cheshire, let alone St Andrews? Can I bring my shopping back from the supermarket on a bicycle? Very few of my car journeys could be done by bicycle. The last one was a 20 minute drive each way by car, it would be an hour and 20 minutes by bicycle. This is a journey I do once or twice a week.
I also almost always either have a passenger or luggage, or am on my way to pick up or drop off one or the other.
I wonder what increased bicycle use would mean for the high street, if people are limited in the amount of shopping they can carry.
Are high streets struggling more in somewhere like the Netherlands than they are here?
I have no idea.
It would also be nteresting to see the retail effect of car-hostile cities such as Oxford.Are high streets struggling more in somewhere like the Netherlands than they are here?
You can look into that and then see if more people cycling in the UK would affect the high st.
I expect it would have a benefit if more people cycled...more parking for those that can't or won't cycle and everyone else is getting healthier and fitter...seems a win win...spending more in the shops and paying more tax, which will help pay for the roads which will need less maintenence as cycles don't tear up the roads as much as heavier vehicles.
Cyclists pay VAT on their own fuel, albeit some will be zero rated.EV drivers do, however, pay VAT on the electricity they use for driving, which cyclists don't.
That is exactly what Iceland do (as long as you spend over a certain amount) and they are dealing in frozen goods.Could Tesco's and the like give an option to do your own shopping, to be left with them for home delivery an hour or so later?
Fraught with complications for highly perishable foods needing refrigeration but a dream for cyclists?
Really? You can cycle at 35mph for several hours? That is what you would need to do to be that fast on a mostly motorway journey. You should easily win the Tour de France.On a bike (not an e-bike), journeys take just under twice as long as in a car.
Two thirds of households in central Tokyo don't own a car.
On a dual carriageway? I would agree about urban journeys, but not others.On a bike (not an e-bike), journeys take just under twice as long as in a car.
This is the point that actually matters - what in media parlance might be a 'joined up transport strategy' - one that takes inI never owned a car in when I lived in central London or for most of my time in central Manchester. This are closer (so lots of things are within walking distance), public transport is better, and its cheaper to occasionally use a taxi than run a car.
If you live in a smaller town, or a rural area, or many suburbs you do need a car or your life becomes very restricted
I hate driving and would far rather do without a car. I even tried public transport for almost exactly the same journey as I mentioned earlier, but when you add waiting for trains, walking to and from stations, killing time somewhere because there is so long before the next train or you had to arrive early. it turns 20 to 30 min each way, to well over an hour each way.
Without some qualification, that is just utter tosh.On a bike (not an e-bike), journeys take just under twice as long as in a car.
Sorry, but you will never average much more than 40mph on any journey - motorway or no motorway it’s the bit at either end that brings your average plummeting down. Have a check - you’ll be surprised.Really? You can cycle at 35mph for several hours? That is what you would need to do to be that fast on a mostly motorway journey. You should easily win the Tour de France.
Even if you can average 25mph to do a journey that is a mixture of A road and some slower bits in half the you could in a car are a professional level cyclist. That is most of my journeys.
It is not reasonably to expect everyone to be an athlete.
I never owned a car in when I lived in central London or for most of my time in central Manchester. This are closer (so lots of things are within walking distance), public transport is better, and its cheaper to occasionally use a taxi than run a car.
I bought a car in Manchester when we had a baby.
If you live in a smaller town, or a rural area, or many suburbs you do need a car or your life becomes very restricted
I hate driving and would far rather do without a car. I even tried public transport for almost exactly the same journey as I mentioned earlier, but when you add waiting for trains, walking to and from stations, killing time somewhere because there is so long before the next train or you had to arrive early. it turns 20 to 30 min each way, to well over an hour each way.
Which qualifications do I need to know how to ride a bike, and to know how long it takes?Without some qualification, that is just utter tosh
That does not work. Private companies exist to make profit.The best way to sort many of those things out is to remove government's involvement. Police and defence need government control; the rest could be given to the private sector to work out.
Sorry, but you will never average much more than 40mph on any journey - motorway or no motorway it’s the bit at either end that brings your average plummeting down. Have a check - you’ll be surprised.
3) This is all at a leisurely pace.
For example, the last kilometre of my journey home includes a gradient of 12% and is 9% on average. I can get up there in the car, (having just driven 15 miles on motorway (not available to bike) and A road at 70 mph) in 3 minutes, it would take me a minimum of 20 minutes on a bike, despite the Round Britain cycle race doing it in 4 minutes.I would stop digging if I were you. It all depends where you live and where you are going, i.e., personal circumstances.
Yes, it does. Which means that lots of people *could* do things if they wanted to.I would stop digging if I were you. It all depends where you live and where you are going, i.e., personal circumstances.
But then I would crash into the car in front.Perhaps you need to drive a bit faster. I was taught to make progress when learning to drive.
It’s very surprising what you can achieve on a bike once you’re fit, and extremely rewarding.For example, the last kilometre of my journey home includes a gradient of 12% and is 9% on average. I can get up there in the car, (having just driven 15 miles on motorway (not available to bike) and A road at 70 mph) in 3 minutes, it would take me a minimum of 20 minutes on a bike, despite the Round Britain cycle race doing it in 4 minutes.
Yes. I'm old enough to remember the nationalized ones.Like the energy companies?
Removal of IR35 won't happen although you might get a rationalisation of how it is implemented.More tax incentives for small business, reduction in red tape and removal of IR35.