Weststander
Well-known member
HMRC take say 40% of £200k earnings.
I went for £500k plus. £25,000 net income per month would enable almost anyttimg.
I went for £500k plus. £25,000 net income per month would enable almost anyttimg.
It is possible to be rich at any of the earning options outlined. The biggest discrepancies exist in unearned income and the transfer of assets between generations.
For example who is richer here?
1 A 25 year old who owns a substantial property outright and a top end car, does not work and has £49K index linked income from investments
2 A household with exceptional earnings within 1 year of £500K, with no assets?
I'd agree with that. Back in 2010 the government implemented the policy of eroding personal allowance by £1 for every £2 earned over 100K - aka the 100K 60% tax trap. £100K in 2010 is the equivalent to about 144K today, so definitely a really good annual income. These days more and more people are hitting that threshold, which hasn't shifted despite 13 years worth of inflation.Yes you do, there are loads of factors at play, but that would be way too long and complicated to put into a NSC poll.
Someone on a £100K salary would definitely have been classed as 'rich' by a large proportion of the population until relatively recently, I think. But I can't see how that is the case now.
Its more, the tax bands have been lowered, its now 45% above 125k, and for every £2 you earn over 100k, you'd lose £1 of tax free allowance, so if someone hits 125k they've lost the full 12500 tax free and are on 45% (+ NAT ins on top), overall taxation is way in excess of 50%, and so many things like free child care/nursery hours are lost in full if you earn 1p over 100k.HMRC take say 40% of £200k earnings.
I went for £500k plus. £25,000 net income per month would enable almost anyttimg.
definitely and none of that considers that actual balance of the household, 1 salary at that level for household or more salaries?Yes you do, there are loads of factors at play, but that would be way too long and complicated to put into a NSC poll.
Someone on a £100K salary would definitely have been classed as 'rich' by a large proportion of the population until relatively recently, I think. But I can't see how that is the case now.
Exceptional earnings e.g. a one off.If the household are also 25 year olds, (2).
£0.5m a year for the next 40 years or more, should generate great wealth, assuming they’re not idiots.
Judging by when I saw him on Saturday he's too busy running the Hangleton Old Railway with an 'Ivan' running vest and pushing through anyone standing there talking to be able to answer you.Calling @Steve Foster
Taking it back a step, don't you have to decide how you measure rich-ness?
You've used income and income alone as a measure, which is fair enough, but I think you probably need to factor in at least one other element - assets and, very probably, debt too.
A lot of those we consider amongst the very richest won't have an income at all, at least not in the way that most of us considers what an income is.
Exactly this - inherit a million pound house/estate from your folks and you could do well on a modest income if debts are zero.Taking it back a step, don't you have to decide how you measure rich-ness?
You've used income and income alone as a measure, which is fair enough, but I think you probably need to factor in at least one other element - assets and, very probably, debt too.
A lot of those we consider amongst the very richest won't have an income at all, at least not in the way that most of us considers what an income is.
Indeed, and part of the problem with this planet is how GDP per head is always the go to measure for "success".Personally I think I'm rich - not because I earn megabucks ( I don't ) - but I earn enough to pay for the things I need and want to - bills, mortgage, eating out etc - and have reserves in the bank for a "rainy day". Compared to most I have a very modest mortgage and only ten years to go. I have three cracking, grounded and loving children and a loving and understanding wife. And in the last few months I've seen BHA play the best football I've ever seen them play. Stuff richness being about how much you earn - it's how rich your life is.
This is a Mustafa poll.Taking it back a step, don't you have to decide how you measure rich-ness?
You've used income and income alone as a measure, which is fair enough, but I think you probably need to factor in at least one other element - assets and, very probably, debt too.
A lot of those we consider amongst the very richest won't have an income at all, at least not in the way that most of us considers what an income is.
Even better inherit "farm buildings" if you really want to bypass paying tax. It used to be justified on the basis that splitting up large farms was inefficient. These days farmers seem to be tenants and all the benefits go to the property owners to pass down through the generations.Exactly this - inherit a million pound house/estate from your folks and you could do well on a modest income if debts are zero.
There is little point in asking a mix of people with sufficient time to piss about during the day on a football forum what 'rich' means. The question, therefore, is a bit rich.According to the ONS, the median household income in the UK is 34,000 yet almost half the voters so far think you need 14 times that to be rich. I'm sure many have had to tighten their belts in recent years but sometimes you have to reflect on how lucky you are.
This......got loads of early-retired pals living off savings, investment income and redundancy payments who have no income as such. Some are what most of us consider loaded.Taking it back a step, don't you have to decide how you measure rich-ness?
You've used income and income alone as a measure, which is fair enough, but I think you probably need to factor in at least one other element - assets and, very probably, debt too.
A lot of those we consider amongst the very richest won't have an income at all, at least not in the way that most of us considers what an income is.