beorhthelm
A. Virgo, Football Genius
- Jul 21, 2003
- 35,994
point was the arguement you made leads to a conclusion we could simply take everything to be "fair". after any tax the inheritor still has more money than those with no inheritance at all. also the example of child A & B is too narrow, we could have a hundred different scenarios of peoples lives, the tax system shouldnt be based around one or two examples. your issue is with property values, which is due to excess demand in the south east and not enough building. inheritance and IHT doesn't solve that.Or we could find something in between - allow people to hand down some cash to their kids, but bring in a high tax rate at a certain amount, or increasing percentages the higher the value. At the moment, IHT is only applied if your estate is worth over £325k, or over £500k if giving it to your children or grandchildren.
The problem mainly lies with property imo. I'm 32, and I don't think I know any couples who were able to buy a house before the age of 30 without getting help from parents or grandparents (and much harder for single people). And most of them have well above average household incomes. Nearly all of our parents were able to buy houses in their early 20s with little help from their parents. With increasing rents and house values, this situation will get worse and worse unless something changes.
Inheritance is intrinsically linked to this - it wasn't such an issue in the past, so I can understand why older generations don't see it as much. But for younger generations, it will increasingly be the case that the only way to buy a house is through inheritance.
Oh, and Child B wouldn't be mortgage free before 50 because they'd have been paying rent for the first 10 years (minimum) of their career. Unless they'd manage to get a significantly higher wage than Child A, but then it's not a like-for-like comparison.