Cos the tax has already been paid on the earnings that have been paid into the pension funds?Give it a rest about the gold reserves, do a bit of research!!!!!! As for pensions, why should pension funds get tax relief on dividends and nobody else?
Cos the tax has already been paid on the earnings that have been paid into the pension funds?Give it a rest about the gold reserves, do a bit of research!!!!!! As for pensions, why should pension funds get tax relief on dividends and nobody else?
Surprisingly, I think, despite the Liberal Democrats only having a consistent 8-10% in the poll, they will hold on to more seats than people assume. The key question is the collapse in their vote. Where they have MP's they often prove popular, and may hold a loyalty vote. Where they were challenging, yes, they have no chance. All that matters is their vote in the constituencies they hold.
Give it a rest about the gold reserves, do a bit of research!!!!!! As for pensions, why should pension funds get tax relief on dividends and nobody else?
I think Nasty Nick in Sheffield Hallam is in for a tonking from the electorate next May
A popular student constituency. Why would they not vote for him ?
Oh, wait.....
Cos the tax has already been paid on the earnings that have been paid into the pension funds?
So, the budget deficit was all Labour's fault and nothing to do with the global financial crisis was it? As for the situation in France I think you'll find it has more to do with their inextricable link with the Eurozone which has overriden any policy formulated on a domestic basis. Higher taxes for the wealthy do work but only as part of a wider economic formula and I don't buy this let the wealthy keep their money and it will trickle down to us plebs, let the wealthy keep their money and they'll do just that, keep it. This type of "doff the cap to the country squire" attitude should be consigned to where it belongs, somewhere between the 17th and 18th century.
The dividends are earnings and all earnings are taxed!
not on the money you put in a pension! it is inconsistant to ask people to save, give them a tax relief to encourage this, then tax any earnings on those savings.
The inconsistency then is not giving tax relief on other forms of saving eg building society (notwithstanding ISAs)? You earn money, you get taxed, you put what's left in the savings account, it earns interest and you get taxed on that interest.
The other thing about this change introduced today is that I have seen comment in that it will be used as a vehicle to avoid inheritance tax!!! Which end of society is going to benefit from that?
but thats not a pension is it? the provision for tax relief is expressly to encourage long term savings in pension funds. for all intents this defines pensions from other "savings". besides iirc you can claim back tax on savings if you aren't earning above the basic rate threashold. earn money = get taxed at prevailing marginal rate. put money into a pension = get tax relief on the money put in. earn money in a pension = get taxed. that is clearly inconsistant. and lets be clear, its the vast majority of people taking out private pensions that are hurt by this, me and you that are having their pension reduced by this. (unless you are fortunate enough to be in a public sector pension)
it avoids a punitive death tax, but the inherited pension fund is subject to income tax. those that will benefit from this are the middle classes, with a couple of pension pots that they dont "use up". the end of society you think this will benefit will be least effected as they are likly to be able to pass on an untouched pension without tax under the current rules.
A popular student constituency. Why would they not vote for him ?
Oh, wait.....
I don't profess to be an expert but really am just looking at the general principle rather than the intricate detail.
aim for a social anarchist political structure, with direct democracy (representative democracy).
The inconsistency then is not giving tax relief on other forms of saving eg building society (notwithstanding ISAs)? You earn money, you get taxed, you put what's left in the savings account, it earns interest and you get taxed on that interest.
The other thing about this change introduced today is that I have seen comment in that it will be used as a vehicle to avoid inheritance tax!!! Which end of society is going to benefit from that?
It is not inconsistent. Any income you take from the pension fund is taxed at your highest rate. In a savings account you get taxed on the interest (unless you are a non-tax payer) because you can withdraw interest or capital at any time and you only pay the tax once. In a pension plan the money is locked in and can only be withdrawn under certain circumstances, at which point the income is taxed. When Brown introduced tax on dividends he was introducing double taxation. That's why he is a thief who single-handedly virtually destroyed many people's pensions. He's not too clever at gold trading either.
Sorry, but think you missed the point I was making. Why is one form of saving actively encouraged by way of tax relief on what you put in and another, which may also be a long term saving for later life, not have the same tax relief. I think your comment about getting tax back if you are low paid is a red herring when considering the general principle.
As for your equation, surely the proportion of the money you earn that goes into the pension is effectively not taxed. For example, put simply, you pay 20% income tax and contribute 10% of your gross earnings into pension. You earn £100. £10 is paid into pension and of the remaining £90, you get £72 having had £18 deducted for income tax. The £10 paid into the pension has not been subject to tax and what you are saying is that the money that that £10 now earns (whether that be interest or dividiends) should also not be taxed!
With regard to the pensions affected. The 'end of society' that will benefit will be those that have a large untouched pot in their fund. I'm not sure but as I understand it once you take a lump sum and buy an annuity with the balance then you wouldn't have a fund to transfer. I suspect the majority of people would do just that. It would be a much smaller section of society that has massive pension pots that they can afford to leave untouched or only take out a proportion and therefore pass the balance on when they die. Inheritance tax may be punitive but on the scale of things very few people pay it. in 2011/12, there were 550,000 deaths of which only 15,000 estates actually paid IHT!
Going back to the very heart of the matter. We are all supposed to be in this together. GO still wants to reduce the deficit with more austerity but he only seems to want to hit those that can least afford it whilst actually giving money back to those that are sitting relatively comfortably. Why not propose the pension changes for when he no longer needs to make budgetry cuts rather than with immediate effect?
I don't profess to be an expert but really am just looking at the general principle rather than the intricate detail.
Just as an addendum, just seen this little snippet from the BBC :-
How many people have been paying 55% tax?
Until April 2011, anyone over the age of 75 had to buy an annuity. In the three and a half years since then, relatively few people will have paid tax at 55%. But neither the Treasury nor HM Revenue and Customs will say exactly how many.
One would assume that it is a relatively small number so that comes back to the point of who are the main beneficiaries of this change!
not on the money you put in a pension! it is inconsistant to ask people to save, give them a tax relief to encourage this, then tax any earnings on those savings.
I think you find the people who are dipping their hands into your pension fund most of all are the pension fund managers.