Camicus
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And the award for the most middle class post of the year....Do most people not have ISAs?
And the award for the most middle class post of the year....Do most people not have ISAs?
And the award for the most middle class post of the year....
That means 60 million of us don'tah, dont address the point, play the man instead of the ball. 23million people have ISAs, then theres pensions, cash in hand jobs, booze cruises. every contractor i know uses an umbrella company paying them a dividend instead of full pay and a whole bunch of expenses goes through the books. fact is, everyone avoids tax if and when they can, no one maximises their tax payments.
That means 60 million of us don't
Not a Labour Party supporter but impressed by milliband on this.
He also burnt the new labour bridges with the Murdoch empire.
Whether you are a labour supporter or like me not I do admire
these courageous acts.
Yes when it came to tax avoidance light touch regulation in general ,
corruption and governance on behalf of the rich New labour gave
the Tories a run for their money but fair play to Ed he seems a man
of more principal even if I do not think he has a program to deliver
real advantages for the majority of people.
I was a soldier I am now a prison officer. How dare you suggest I am as venal and corrupt as your tory heroes.There's 'only' a 64m population in the UK currently. And even if you exclude the third of the population that have ISAs, everyone still gets tax relief on their payments into their private pensions - i.e. they evade paying tax. I take it you send a cheque each year to HMRC as a donation for the tax you evaded on your pension payments ?
There's 'only' a 64m population in the UK currently. And even if you exclude the third of the population that have ISAs, everyone still gets tax relief on their payments into their private pensions - i.e. they evade paying tax. I take it you send a cheque each year to HMRC as a donation for the tax you evaded on your pension payments ?
There's 'only' a 64m population in the UK currently. And even if you exclude the third of the population that have ISAs, everyone still gets tax relief on their payments into their private pensions - i.e. they evade paying tax. I take it you send a cheque each year to HMRC as a donation for the tax you evaded on your pension payments ?
That means 60 million of us don't
This old chestnut - ISAs and pensions are neither tax evasion or avoidance, they are the use of mechanisms provided by the government to encourage those who are fortunate enough to be able to save for their futures to do so by providing tax incentives. Channeling your wealth offshore in order to take advantage of holes in legislation identified by accountants and lawyers that the vast majority of us cannot afford does not even remotely resemble the prudent use of savings incentives explicitly provided by the govt.
23million is about half the adult population. half of the adult population invest in something that has no purpose other than to avoid some tax.
if you avoid a tax, that's tax avoidance, doesn't matter if the mechanism is provided by the government or not. do so illegally and that's evasion. there is a difference also between avoidance and aggressive avoidance, where arrangements are deliberately and carefully constructed to exploit an allowance or relief, which is only the legal side of evasion. however there is so many reliefs, allowances and exemption that the tax system has created a culture of avoidance, and you dont need expensive accountants to find these mechanisms. then for some reason we scream blue murder because someone uses them, usually because they are richer than yauw.
the issue here is really that we should stop complaining about those using the system, but get on at the politicians who use the tax system to bribe one group over another, we need to get a simplified tax system in place not get distracted by media storms over individuals.
the issue here is really that we should stop complaining about those using the system, but get on at the politicians who use the tax system to bribe one group over another, we need to get a simplified tax system in place not get distracted by media storms over individuals.
Like many things, it's not binary though is it, you could argue that one avoids tax by claiming your tax free PAYE allowance but you would be wrong, likewise you would be wrong if you catagorise investment in ISAs as what we consider tax avoidance. But on the spectrum of managing one's taxes, actively searching for avenues to bypass parliament's intention is what I consider aggresive tax avoidance.
Your point about politicians tells me everything that is wrong with how people think about this subject - No moral compass, if it's not legislated against then it's okay. It's not illegal to be an absolute c**t, doesn't make it okay though.
Finally, I don't buy the envy argument you use - There are many people that will not use these schemes despite having the wealth or nous to do so, perhaps because they are able to use moral judgement.
There is no system that legislates how to avoid tax using offshore companies, banks etc etc,
You've put this perfectly here. And as to the 'politics of envy' argument, that's a joke. Are beorthelm, etc telling me that I'm envious of Cameron, Osborne, Fink et al? The last thing I am is envious of them, as they're despicable. I'd just rather we don't have to put up with them, and the twaddle that they utter.
im saying we focus on individual held up as examples, rather than tens or hundreds of thousands (millions in the case of ISAs) who are doing the same quietly, within the system. there are whole industries that avoid taxes but we dont criticise them at all. just wealthy individuals. i don't call it envy, that's your term, but i cant understand why else we are so selective on the matter. unless its simply naivety that we don't realise, which is what i'm trying to raise : do we understand what we are critising, do we see where the problem is?
If your point is that there's not only a difference between tax avoidance and tax evasion, but also a difference between normal or 'vanilla' tax avoidance and aggressive tax avoidance, then I'd agree, although you don't really seem to be focusing on the latter, merely trying to undermine whoever seeks to criticise it.