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Digital ID.
I suppose it all depends on how far the digital ID goes. We've had them in the Netherlands since 2004, online, not a physical card. You use it for all communications with government, both local and national. It's used so that doctors, hospitals etc have access to medical records when treating you. New health issue, different hospital, the new hospital can see what other issues you have and what meds you're on. You use it for your annual tax returns. That's the scope of it. Nothing sinister in it. There's no tracking of whereabouts. No bank transactions checked. Not connected to retail outlets. There's no controlling of what you spend, where or what on. There's nothing sinister in it whatsoever. If the UK goes as far as NL I see no problems. Go further and then it does raise serious issues. My opinion based on 21 years of having a digital ID issued under tight conditions for its use.
Under company law a company can only pay dividends out of retained profits, not out of for example capital.
You might care to fact check your assertion that billions have been paid out in dividends when billions have been made in losses.
If this had been done then the directors and auditors should be held personally responsible
You have a more professional insight into such matters than most,Rog, but the facts seem to be that Thames Water has accrued 22 billion GDP of debt since it was privatised in 1989 and that it only recently ceased paying dividends to shareholders.
I believe they’ve paid out 7 billion GDP in dividends since privatisation, which would seem to back up MA’s assertion. I also believe they’re unlikely to pay further dividends before 2030, but that seems to be a case of ‘shutting the proverbial stable door after the horse has bolted’.
Perfectly happy to be corrected if I’ve misunderstood.
Last edited by ramAnag; 27-09-2025 at 12:04 PM.
As an initial observation, accruing debt does not mean the same as making trading losses. Consider you probably have been in debt much of your life via mortgage, but you still had income via salary.
The cessor of dividends recently suggests they no longer have retained earnings to distribute and aren't budgeting for any going forward.
So sorry, the above is not fact checking on historic performance which is understandable as you're not an accountant.
I'll have a look myself - have no great skin in the game as to whether Thames Water acted illegally or not but I do doubt it given the scrutiny that they've been under in recent years.
I don’t think either MA or I mentioned legality. He just raised the morality - or otherwise - of a company being allowed to pay significant dividends at a time of even more significant financial loss. It seems particularly wrong, as he suggested, when the company is concerned with the delivery of essential services such as fresh water and responsible sewage treatment.
Listen to yourself for a minute. They would not have been able to pay dividends if, in so doing, they contravened company law. Therefore the inference is there must have been profits accumulated in the company to allow it. Morality has nothing to do with thay process.
Where morality does come into play would be if they chose to pay dividends out of profits when they knew infrastructure was collapsing around them and they could afford to fix it but chose not to.
If you really want to see, rather than just arguing for the sake of it, look here
https://www.thameswater.co.uk/media-...rt-2024-25.pdf
Go to the statement of financial position on page 105. You will see that at 31-03-2025 the company has indeed got accumulated losses of 641.8m, but look at the 2024 comparartives and you will see that, a year earlier, it had retained profits of 833.9m, so too the year before that 916.7m.
Now without going back through history to see if those accumulated profits or losses dippedin any one year or more, I cannot be sure, but am reasonably confident in asserting that Thames Water has not made billions in losses over time, but rather just in the last financial year - a year where you stated they had ceased paying dividends. Furthermore the total losses made over the company's history stoold at 641.8m rather than 10's of billions.
Also please note that this figure is after having paid out all the earlier billions of dividends complained about.
As your mate says "FACTS" unless of course you believe that the official audited financial statements are a fabrication (possibly of the right wing media).
In the above I am not seeking to defend Thames Water, who seem guilty of failing to invest in the future and deserve to be dismantled if they are now insolvent, but lets at least deal with their predicament based on facts and not rhetoric (now where ahve I heard that before)
A company has built up massive debts of getting on for 20Bn. That same company, has accrued a backlog of repairs and maintenance estimated to cost 15Bn to catch up on. That same company has paid Billions out in dividends while increasing customer bills.
It might be legal to have paid out those dividends. If it is then the Law needs changing. IMO, that company is morally bankrupt.
I'd be interested to hear/read who exactly they think is going to:
1. Pay off the massive debts they have.
2. Pay to eradicate the R&M backlog