Clive Walker
Stand Or Fall
Can someone explain this to me
Does this only impact people who have suffered loss of earnings/profit?
Does this only impact people who have suffered loss of earnings/profit?
Because profit is the same as gross income in the employed world.
Another example - a builder carries out extensions, his turnover is £100,000, costs including running a van and office rent £70,000, profit £30,000. The £30,000 is the equivalent of someone grossing £30,000 in a job.
It’s no benefit to him personally that he banks £100k, £70k is accounted for, he has to live on £30k pre-tax, the same as an employed person grossing £30k.
No one is suggesting that the nation should pay small businesses an amount equal to their turnover, the country would be bankrupt within a week. The government’s measures match the best in the world and have been widely welcomed by Labour, the SNP, unions and the FSB.
Good to see the signalling on levelling up the tax burden in future, in a similar vein of going for the Facebook,, Amazon and other equivalents
I actually traded as a limited company once...ironically it was a socialist government that made it attractive to do so .....Gordon Brown made it that the first 10k of profits was tax free...so as you do took salary covering personal allowance about 5k and balance in divs as net profit was sub 10k....only lasted a year i think ....Gordon couldn’t understand why so many rushed to become limited....i just set many own up over the net for £50 ...after a few years it became less and less attractive and not having an accountant i was filing a personal return a company return and stuff to companies house....sod that i thought ...started using an accountant and kept it simple reverted back to being self employed
But no sick leave on full pay, company pension contributions, paid holidays etc. for the self employed that many (not all) employed people get, and the job security and rights full time employment gives them. It's all very well saying levelling up, but self employment can be far more of a risk, and protections such as income protection, critical illness etc. are not tax deductible either. It's hardly anywhere near mentioning in the same sentence let along the same book the tax avoidance of big corporations compared to self employed to employed tax burdens.
But no sick leave on full pay, company pension contributions, paid holidays etc. for the self employed that many (not all) employed people get, and the job security and rights full time employment gives them. It's all very well saying levelling up, but self employment can be far more of a risk, and protections such as income protection, critical illness etc. are not tax deductible either. It's hardly anywhere near mentioning in the same sentence let along the same book the tax avoidance of big corporations compared to self employed to employed tax burdens.
Try comparing a self employed person whose income/turnover is £30k with someone that has a £30k salary.
To be fair, if you are self employed then if you are a success then you get all the rewards. That's the risk.
That’s exactly right, small limited company hating class warriors on NSC, wouldn’t believe that it was Labour who pushed the huge increase in numbers. It was actually a very deliberate policy, a very senior tax expert told us that a limited company gave HMRC more assurance as to compliance by the taxpayer and the accounts format is far easier to benchmark for tax evasion.
Many people like you gave us the ghost, often sick of the admin, 2 Companies House deadlines per annum, payroll for the director, dividends and dealing with the dreaded overdrawn directors loan account, an array of other taxes linked to that, plus benefits and expenses returns. Some even spotted that the accountant who pushed for the limited company, charged a lot more!
That’s exactly right, small limited company hating class warriors on NSC, wouldn’t believe that it was Labour who pushed the huge increase in numbers. It was actually a very deliberate policy, a very senior tax expert told us that a limited company gave HMRC more assurance as to compliance by the taxpayer and the accounts format is far easier to benchmark for tax evasion.
Try comparing a self employed person whose income/turnover is £30k with someone that has a £30k salary.
Amazing isn't it. Someone commits to a charged company bank account, statements fully checked with the company accounts for every penny. Submitted accounts that are open for public scrutiny, and an often painstaking amount of detail even for modest turnovers. So all the tax completely transparent, open for inspection, and the limited company traders are the bad guys?
I didnt see or hear the announcement but reading through the bbc website report as this:
The sting in the tail? The chancellor said he can no longer justify, after things get back to normal, that self-employed people pay less tax than the employed. But that is for another day.
Is he referring to those who trade through Limited Companies....or the self employed over all
Self employed, directors of companies pay NI at the same rate as any other employee
I remember going for my complimentary coffee and half hour chat with a firm in Hove..mentioned some figure for setting the company up and thought no way do it myself...i felt comfortable enough as in my previous incarnation i was a credit underwriter and used to reading/analysing balance sheets....but time/hassle etc changed my mind...bit like when machinery breaks i could probably mend most ..but I’m better off in money and satisfaction passing that job on to the pro’s
I didnt see or hear the announcement but reading through the bbc website report as this:
The sting in the tail? The chancellor said he can no longer justify, after things get back to normal, that self-employed people pay less tax than the employed. But that is for another day.
Is he referring to those who trade through Limited Companies....or the self employed over all
So what’s he angling at
I didnt see or hear the announcement but reading through the bbc website report as this:
The sting in the tail? The chancellor said he can no longer justify, after things get back to normal, that self-employed people pay less tax than the employed. But that is for another day.
Is he referring to those who trade through Limited Companies....or the self employed over all
So the welfare state paid to bail the banks over 10 years of cuts, the self-employed to pay for the coronavirus over the next 10? Heaven forbid they go after any of their donors...
Edited:
He is referring to the Self employed.
Directors of companies pay NI at the same rate as any other employee