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[Politics] Inheritance Tax



nicko31

Well-known member
Jan 7, 2010
18,191
Gods country fortnightly




Weststander

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Aug 25, 2011
67,548
Withdean area
Proper levelling up could be on its way..


Already mentioned in the Labour Meltdown thread. Left wing think tank ideas are being exaggerated as Reeves policies in the newspapers.

Levelling up? Literally, than can only be the case if additional tax raised finds its way to the poor, homeless and people unable to find security in an affordable home.

If lost in the tax and spend ether and not to those groups, it hasn’t levelled up.
 




Pavilionaire

Well-known member
Jul 7, 2003
31,089
If these stories are to believed then Labour will also have to do something about Trusts.

Before Osborne introduced the £175,000 Residence Nil Rate Band, people were putting assets into Trust precisely to help pass on the family home on second death. The £175K RNRB effectively killed that loophole, and so was warmly received at the time.

The government need to get away from taxing the Estate of the dead to taxing the newly-acquired income / assets of the living beneficiaries.
 


Weststander

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Aug 25, 2011
67,548
Withdean area
Proper levelling up could be on its way..


If these stories are to believed then Labour will also have to do something about Trusts.

Before Osborne introduced the £175,000 Residence Nil Rate Band, people were putting assets into Trust precisely to help pass on the family home on second death. The £175K RNRB effectively killed that loophole, and so was warmly received at the time.

The government need to get away from taxing the Estate of the dead to taxing the newly-acquired income / assets of the living beneficiaries.

NSC folk of the 'left' and right have boasted about the use of trusts to avoid IHT.
 




beorhthelm

A. Virgo, Football Genius
Jul 21, 2003
35,821
If these stories are to believed then Labour will also have to do something about Trusts.

Before Osborne introduced the £175,000 Residence Nil Rate Band, people were putting assets into Trust precisely to help pass on the family home on second death. The £175K RNRB effectively killed that loophole, and so was warmly received at the time.

The government need to get away from taxing the Estate of the dead to taxing the newly-acquired income / assets of the living beneficiaries.
daftly some people would rather keep IHT on principle, rather than get rid and tax the recipients. even if it means more tax and fewer loopholes.
 








Machiavelli

Well-known member
Oct 11, 2013
17,453
Fiveways
NSC folk of the 'left' and right have boasted about the use of trusts to avoid IHT.
It's all perfectly legal, so I don't have a problem with it. I learnt yesterday that pensions are immune from IHT so, by the same logic, that's fine. Isn't the question, rather, whether you support the tightening up of loopholes so the revenue can raise more from IHT, or not? After all, I'm also of the view that any government need to be honest and either raise taxes or cut spending. Raising taxes opens up the question of which ones, and the widely mooted CGT and IHT are preferable for me. Cutting spending opens up the question of what will be cut -- WFA hasn't exactly gone too well on this front -- and, again, if we're to be honest there are some parts of public spending that have grown enormously and become a far larger slice of the % share, eg pensions, healthcare.
 




Triggaaar

Well-known member
Oct 24, 2005
52,107
Goldstone
Already mentioned in the Labour Meltdown thread. Left wing think tank ideas are being exaggerated as Reeves policies in the newspapers.

Levelling up? Literally, than can only be the case if additional tax raised finds its way to the poor, homeless and people unable to find security in an affordable home.

If lost in the tax and spend ether and not to those groups, it hasn’t levelled up.

It is levelling, just down rather than up.
 






Triggaaar

Well-known member
Oct 24, 2005
52,107
Goldstone
daftly some people would rather keep IHT on principle, rather than get rid and tax the recipients. even if it means more tax and fewer loopholes.

How would you tax the recipients?
 












Weststander

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Aug 25, 2011
67,548
Withdean area
Yep…….easy to determine IHT on the estate as all goes through probate. The admin needed to trace and tax distributions would be immense in relative terms and a lot would escape.

My thoughts exactly. Solicitors or similar literally must pay over the IHT in good time, much to the anger of beneficiaries where I come across through work.

Easy tax to collect, almost impossible to defraud the public purse at that stage.
 








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