is it that there can be achieved? the report describes the recommendations as radical reform. that s what they say is required in this situation from the ecb. the first of them was for there to be an unreserved apology. the ecb has already delivered that as you heard. i m on the other 43, the most eye catching is the equalisation of paint between men and women. the icc commission said they wanted to see match fees the same between the england men s and women s teams immediately and the longer term, within six or seven years, the pay for bull england men and women to have parity. whether or not the ecb feel they can afford to do that it will require a significant change in financing, it remains to be seen. they have given themselves three months to look at the raft of proposals. that is one of those that fall into the category where there
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but in the end, what did that lead to? it led to a crisis in british industry, it led to mass unemployment, and it ultimately led politically to margaret thatcher. so, your view is that the unions created that, not the underinvestment and the failure to retool. no, but i m looking at the end result of a decade of industrial struggle. the industrial strife was the end result of a decade, or more decades of not investing in our economy, allowing other economies to go ahead of us in terms of technology, not retraining, not retooling, not reinvesting. and what also happened during that period, from the war through to the late 70s, was an equalisation of wealth and power in our country, to some extent not perfectly, but we did get women s wage equality. we did get the race relations act. we got health and safety at work act, which is one of the most important pieces of legislation that we ever had, under the wilson government. and a lot of that has been now thrown away because they re go
so, your view is that the unions created that, not the underinvestment and the failure to retool. no, but i m looking at the end result of a decade of industrial struggle. the industrial strife was the end result of a decade, or more decades of not investing in our economy, allowing other economies to go ahead of us in terms of technology, not retraining, not retooling, not reinvesting. and what also happened during that period, from the war through to the late 70s, was an equalisation of wealth and power in our country, to some extent not perfectly, but we did get women s wage equality. we did get the race relations act. we got health and safety at work act, which is one of the most important pieces of legislation that we ever had under the wilson government. and a lot of that has been now thrown away because they re going to casualise our economy, and of course, they exported all those manufacturing jobs as a deliberate and intentional policy under thatcher and tebbit, they sent a