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Yep, that's the one. The problem is that the Parthenia model is fundamentally flawed, and no-one has yet got round to fixing it, so at the moment there's no alternative to the relativity graphs produced on behalf of the big London estates.
Interesting, thanks. As I understand it, though, if Parthenia is successful in the case, a different model of some kind would have to be devised? I expect this one will run for a while.
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Well, that's sort of the problem. The tenants accept that the Parthenia model is flawed, but seem to be expecting the court to come up with a better one, which ain't going to happen. The landlords' relativity chart is almost certainly rather too generous in their favour (not entirely surprisingly, given that they commissioned it) but it doesn't have the glaring errors that the Parthenia model produces.
Yep, that's the one. The problem is that the Parthenia model is fundamentally flawed, and no-one has yet got round to fixing it, so at the moment there's no alternative to the relativity graphs produced on behalf of the big London estates.