Business
Term-time holiday fine rise won’t stop us, say parents
More pupils in England were off school without permission in the last week of the summer term than at any point in the academic year, official figures show.
The latest school attendance data shows 5% of pupils in England were off without permission in the week ending 19 July – around 450,000 pupils.
It comes as the government tightens rules to try to stop parents taking their children out of school to go on holiday.
Fines issued to each parent have gone up from £60 to £80 per child which will be doubled if it happens again within three years. Those with a third fine in a three-year period now face prosecution.
But some parents have told the BBC this is not a deterrent.
Megan Hall and her husband Michael got their first fines after taking their two children on a ski holiday in March and have now booked a two-week holiday later this month.
“The kids will be missing 10 days of school, which is a worry because of the new fines,” Mrs Hall told the BBC.
The couple run a pub and bed and breakfast in Northumberland and said if they took their children – aged four and eight – away during their busy summer season they would incur a cost to their business as well as higher holiday prices.
“I won’t stop doing holidays because that’s what family is about,” said Mrs Hall.
“The alternative is to not have family time, or to teach your kids to lie, saying they are sick, which is something I’m not happy to do,” she added.
Nearly 400,000 penalty notices were issued to parents in England for unauthorised school absences during the 2022-23 academic year. That is much higher than pre-pandemic levels and unauthorised absences have remained at a similar rate over the most recent academic year.
‘A risk we’re willing to take’
Rachel Kelly and her partner took their children out of primary school in May and are waiting for a fine to be issued.
“You don’t want to take them out of school during term time,” she added. “But if it means it’s going to save you thousands of pounds then that’s the best alternative.
“If I can save [money on a holiday] to go towards bills then you are going to do that, it seems to be the sensible option.”
She said fines and prosecutions are “a risk that we’re willing to take”.
Holidaying during term time is substantially cheaper and travel agents say they have seen an increase in enquiries from families weighing up the price difference.
Long haul flights in particular can double during the six-week summer holiday, according to data from the Flight Centre, the fifth largest travel agency in the world.
It gave the BBC examples of price rises between term-time and the summer holidays:
- Thailand: Term-time £554, summer holidays £1,112
- New York: Term-time £586, summer holidays £942
- Orlando: Term-time £556, summer holidays £754
According to Colman Coyne, managing director of travel agency Jetset in Huddersfield an increasing number of families have been looking for holidays during term time.
“Going back three, four years ago it was very rare that we would find a family with school age children travelling outside the Easter, half terms and summer holidays.
“We see now it’s quite a regular thing. And you can see they’re weighing up whether it’s worth risking a fine.”
‘Parents being victimised’
For Dee and Lee Morgan, who have been fined six times in recent years, the new threat of prosecution means they will now stick to school holidays for getaways with their children aged 10 and 13.
“I’m angry we’re having to do this. Life’s hard enough,” said Dee, who is a nurse.
“Money’s tight, things are going up, we all have to go to work, we deserve a holiday – everybody deserves a holiday – why do they have to make it hard?”
“We’re being victimised…everyone has rights, I have rights and they’re my children and it’s my right to take them on holiday.”
The Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson has previously said: “Parents have a legal responsibility to make sure their child is in school, so they benefit from the high and rising standards this government will seek to drive.”
Business
All the market-moving Wall Street chatter from Monday
Business
Boeing staff get 25% pay hike in deal to avoid strike
Boeing is offering its staff a 25% pay bump over a four-year contract, in a bid to avoid a strike that could potentially shut down its assembly lines as early as Friday.
Union leaders representing more than 30,000 employees have urged the workers to support the proposal, describing it as the best contract they had ever negotiated.
If approved the agreement would be an important achievement for Boeing’s new chief executive, Kelly Ortberg, who faces pressure to fix the company’s quality and reputational issues.
Boeing workers in the Seattle and Portland region are set to vote on the deal on Thursday. A strike can still happen if two thirds of union members support it in a separate vote.
In a video message to Boeing workers, the aerospace giant’s chief operating officer, Stephanie Pope, described the proposal as a “historic offer”.
If ratified by union members, it would be the first full labour agreement between the firm and the unions in 16 years.
Although the tentative deal did not match the union’s initial target of a 40% pay rise, negotiators still praised it and advised members to accept it.
“We can honestly say that this proposal is the best contract we’ve negotiated in our history,” said a statement from the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers (IAM).
Aside from the pay bump, the deal offers workers improved healthcare and retirement benefits and a commitment by Boeing to build its next commercial airplane in the Seattle area.
It also gives the union members more say on safety and quality isues.
“Financially, the company finds itself in a tough position due to many self-inflicted missteps. It is IAM members who will bring this company back on track,” the negotiators said, referring to the crises faced by Boeing in recent years.
Mr Ortberg, an aerospace industry veteran and engineer, took over as Boeing’s new chief executive last month.
His appointment came as the firm reported deepening financial losses and continued to struggle to repair its reputation following recent in-flight incidents and two fatal accidents five years ago.
Business
Asia shares slip, China inflation surprisingly soft By Reuters
By Wayne Cole
SYDNEY (Reuters) – Asian share markets slid on Monday after worries about a possible U.S. economic downturn slugged Wall Street, while dragging bond yields and commodity prices lower as investors avoided risk assets for safer harbours.
bore the brunt of the early selling as a stronger yen pressured exporters, losing 2.4% on top of a near 6% slide last week.
MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan slipped 0.6%, after losing 2.25% last week.
and Nasdaq futures were both a fraction lower, after Friday’s slide.
Fed fund futures were little changed as investors wondered whether the mixed U.S. August payrolls report would be enough to tip the Federal Reserve into cutting rates by an outsized 50 basis points when it meets next week.
So far, markets imply only a 29% chance of a large cut, in part due to comments from Fed Governor Christopher Waller and New York Fed President John Williams on Friday, though Waller did leave open the option of aggressive easing.
“Our read of the data is that the labour market continues to cool, but we see no sign of the kind of rapid deterioration in conditions that would call for a 50bp rate cut,” Barclays economist Christian Keller said.
“Importantly, we also see no indication of any appetite for this in Fed communications,” he added. “We retain our call for the Fed to begin its cycle with a 25bp cut, followed by two more 25bp at the remaining two meetings this year, and a total of 75bp of cuts next year.”
Investors are considerably more dovish and have priced in 115 basis points of easing by Christmas and another 127 basis points for 2025.
Data on August U.S. consumer prices on Wednesday should underline the case for a cut, if not the size, with headline inflation seen slowing to 2.6% from 2.9%.
ECB TO EASE
Markets are also fully priced for a quarter-point cut from the European Central Bank on Thursday, but are less sure on whether it will ease in both October and December.
“What matters will be guidance beyond September, where there’s strong pressure on both sides,” analysts at TD Securities noted in a note.
“Wage growth and services inflation remain strong, emboldening the hawks, while growth indicators are flagging softer, emboldening the doves,” they added. “Quarterly cuts are likely more consistent with the new projections.”
The prospect of global policy easing boosted bonds, with 10-year Treasury yields hitting 15-month lows and two-year yields the lowest since March 2023.
The 10-year was last at 3.734% and the two at 3.661%, leaving the curve near its steepest since mid-2022.
The drop in yields encouraged a further unwinding of yen carry trades which saw the dollar sink as deep as 141.75 yen on Friday before steadying at 142.41 early on Monday.
The euro held at $1.1090, having briefly been as high as $1.1155 on Friday. [USD/]
Data on consumer prices (CPI) from China due later Monday are expected to show the Asian giant remains a force for disinflation, with producer prices seen falling an annual 1.4% in August.
The CPI is forecast to edge up to 0.7% for the year, from 0.5%, mainly due to rising food prices.
Figures on China’s trade account due Tuesday are expected to show a slowdown in both export and import growth.
Also on Tuesday, Democrat Kamala Harris and Republican Donald Trump debate for the first time ahead of the presidential election on Nov. 5.
In commodity markets, the slide in bond yields kept gold restrained at $2,496 an ounce and short of its recent all-time top of $2.531. [GOL/]
Oil prices found some support after suffering their biggest weekly fall in 11 months last week amid persistent concerns about global demand. [O/R]
added 57 cents to $71.63 a barrel, while firmed 60 cents to $68.27 per barrel.
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