And the bbc
Inheritance tax increases expected for some in Budget
It is not known how many people are likely to end up paying more under the government's plan.www.bbc.co.uk
Slight amendmentThey’ve covered all bases with a stream of articles, having to appear relevant because hyperbole supremos SlyNews are it at 24-7.
I reckon IHT will be increased to 50% with an immediate implementation.
Does he?
Aye….my ex (who has very little money) lost one of her four sisters last week….estate will probably be 500k because of the house ..as far as i know they’ll be paying IHT as you state…and probably moreThat won’t catch the huge numbers avoiding it. Instead only hitting a narrow band of estates typically £325,000 to £2m who are caught through naivety.
Out of curiosity do you know much about him…ive never heard of him and on the basis of that question won’t be following him…also not on twitterWhat does witless Barry Halverson think of old folk who’ll now freeze? Probably not a great deal, he’s too busy plaguarising old jokes.
Out of curiosity do you know much about him…ive never heard of him…also not on twitter
I think one of the problems has been the ever increasing black hole and the future years of its occurence. All of the talk/speculation has been about filling that now and in coming years. Precious little on the investment side. Otherwise, as one of the supposedley well off, it seems like quite a small group being expected to pay 'a little more' to maintain the status quo.If IHT rules change and I have an increased liability I'll take it on the chin as always (or more accurately, my kids will), as we desperately need more investment in so many areas. And I certainly wouldn't try to stop those who are better off giving a little more on 'a matter of principle'. After all, to agree we need investment and then argue 'but not from me' would be totally ridiculous.
Sorry to hear that.Aye….my ex (who has very little money) lost one of her four sisters last week….estate will probably be 500k because of the house ..as far as i know they’ll be paying IHT as you state…and probably more
I reckon it won't. We'll see.I reckon IHT will be increased to 50% with an immediate implementation.
I suppose it all depends how smart RR is on this, and whether that's sufficient. Despite the fear on this, I don't think she'll be looking to bring more of those into the tax -- as happened with the freezing of the thresholds. It's the other side that she at least ought to be looking via closing down loopholes.That won’t catch the huge numbers avoiding it. Instead only hitting a narrow band of estates typically £325,000 to £2m who are caught through naivety.
I fear you'll have to wait at least ten years on the customs union and, in all likelihood, five years on NI. It's staggering NI received scant attention but twas ever thus in this country. They were a last desperate attempt to demonstrate the fabled 'tax-cutting credentials' of the prior regime and have squeezed the public finances horrendously but at least had one saving grace: it reduced the government take on the working population, and not those that don't.If IHT rules change and I have an increased liability I'll take it on the chin as always (or more accurately, my kids will), as we desperately need more investment in so many areas. And I certainly wouldn't try to stop those who are better off giving a little more on 'a matter of principle'. After all, to agree we need investment and then argue 'but not from me' or 'someone else on principle' would be totally ridiculous.
But it's a little frustrating seeing the Government refuse (and we all know why) to reverse the two desperate NI reductions made by the previous Government in the first quarter this year, costing us over £10B per year, and that pales into insignificance compared to what we lose daily by not re-joining the customs union. I have heard it called an idiocy tax but prefer to see it as the cost of democracy
We all have to take responsibility for the state the country is in, stand up and do our bit, but I'd like the cut off for WFP to be raised a little.
The Tories took 5p off as a 'temporary' measure, so I think that would be something that would/could be stopped now and justified on the basis of 'we're not putting taxes up, we're just not continuing with a temporary reduction' - and therefore fit their manifesto promises and so on. It's worth about £5bn.Not talked about much, but I can see fuel duty being increased in the upcoming budget