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Quote from: BillyStubbsTears on November 18, 2023, 09:16:30 pmQuote from: Bentley Bullet on November 18, 2023, 09:00:32 pmIt's those with aspirations who DON'T want inheritance tax stopped who are like Turkeys voting for Christmas!https://www.drfc-vsc.co.uk/index.php?topic=289382.msg1271264#msg1271264You started this thread by saying If you wanted proof that the Tories have given up on the next Election and are looking to line their own pockets.How is considering abolishing a tax that is unpopular with 55% of the public a sign that they have given up on the next election?Quote from: Bentley Bullet on November 18, 2023, 07:52:17 pmTimes have changed. The old working class has become a new middle class with aspirations, who like to choose what is best for them and their families. They want a political party that won't punish them for being successful. Inheritance tax is seen to be one of the most unfair taxes, according to a recent poll that shows 55% in favour of its abolishment, with only 33% in favour of retaining it.
Quote from: Bentley Bullet on November 18, 2023, 09:00:32 pmIt's those with aspirations who DON'T want inheritance tax stopped who are like Turkeys voting for Christmas!https://www.drfc-vsc.co.uk/index.php?topic=289382.msg1271264#msg1271264
It's those with aspirations who DON'T want inheritance tax stopped who are like Turkeys voting for Christmas!
Times have changed. The old working class has become a new middle class with aspirations, who like to choose what is best for them and their families. They want a political party that won't punish them for being successful. Inheritance tax is seen to be one of the most unfair taxes, according to a recent poll that shows 55% in favour of its abolishment, with only 33% in favour of retaining it.
I didn't say it was going to win them the election, I said it seemed it would be a popular decision with the public, and certainly not something that would be responsible for them losing the General Election.
Na BST. You were wrong, and now you're trying to wriggle out of it. I doubt it will bother you too much. You know too well that people will still stand by you.Night night.
On another day we'll address the rich leaving the country due to IHT.
Jeez, there's some nonsense written on this thread, and people twisting figures to try and prove a point.But I'm going to hold my hand up here and say that if my wife and I died tomorrow our kids would be faced with a rather large tax bill. My argument of course is that they shouldn't have to, and here's why.Firstly BST with his opening post gets something wrong, he says it affects the 4% richest people in the country, when in actual fact that 4% applies to 4% of estates that fall into the IHT trap. Those very rich people that you talk about don't leave their estates to the vagaries of the tax man, no, they're rich enough to have moved all their assets and money around and out of the reaches of the tax man. That's one major reason why the current IHT rules don't work. IHT increasingly affects the normal working bloke because of the way the property market has moved in recent years.And I would class myself as a normal working bloke. I grew up as one of 5 kids with a single parent. We lived in a council house and was as close to poverty as you can be. But I learnt lessons from my mum, and one of those was to work hard, and that's what I tried to do. I didn't have a fancy job either, just a bang average wage all my life, but what I did do was save. I did without the fancy car and holidays, instead I put money into my pension and on top of that I managed to build my own house by putting in the extra work, gave up evenings and weekends.So, now I find myself with a reasonable pension pot and a house which puts me on the wrong side of the IHT trap. I've paid tax on all that money so that I could secure a future for me and my kids, and people on here suggest that losing 40% of that is OK? No, its not! Should I have squandered it along the way? Maybe. Does that put me on the right side of the argument that you guys seem to enjoy beating each other up about? Its my money, and I should have the choice to do with it what I choose to do. If that's fancy cars and holidays then fair enough, why should me giving it to my children be any different?
Quote from: silent majority on November 19, 2023, 12:10:46 pmJeez, there's some nonsense written on this thread, and people twisting figures to try and prove a point.But I'm going to hold my hand up here and say that if my wife and I died tomorrow our kids would be faced with a rather large tax bill. My argument of course is that they shouldn't have to, and here's why.Firstly BST with his opening post gets something wrong, he says it affects the 4% richest people in the country, when in actual fact that 4% applies to 4% of estates that fall into the IHT trap. Those very rich people that you talk about don't leave their estates to the vagaries of the tax man, no, they're rich enough to have moved all their assets and money around and out of the reaches of the tax man. That's one major reason why the current IHT rules don't work. IHT increasingly affects the normal working bloke because of the way the property market has moved in recent years.And I would class myself as a normal working bloke. I grew up as one of 5 kids with a single parent. We lived in a council house and was as close to poverty as you can be. But I learnt lessons from my mum, and one of those was to work hard, and that's what I tried to do. I didn't have a fancy job either, just a bang average wage all my life, but what I did do was save. I did without the fancy car and holidays, instead I put money into my pension and on top of that I managed to build my own house by putting in the extra work, gave up evenings and weekends.So, now I find myself with a reasonable pension pot and a house which puts me on the wrong side of the IHT trap. I've paid tax on all that money so that I could secure a future for me and my kids, and people on here suggest that losing 40% of that is OK? No, its not! Should I have squandered it along the way? Maybe. Does that put me on the right side of the argument that you guys seem to enjoy beating each other up about? Its my money, and I should have the choice to do with it what I choose to do. If that's fancy cars and holidays then fair enough, why should me giving it to my children be any different?Bottom line is that if they're having to pay tax then they're the lucky ones.
SMYou're right, it's 4% of estates. Do you have evidence that the richest exempt themselves from IHT?The other figure I gave is still correct. Of all the estates below £1m, the average IHT take is 2%. For estates above £1m, the average IHT take is 17-20%. So who benefits most from a cut in IHT.Here's the point that you are not taking into account.If you cut IHT, what else gives?NHS funding?Schools funding?Defence funding?Roads?Rail?Or do we put up VAT that disproportionately hits the poorer in society?For what it's worth, under current rates and allowances, I would expect my own estate to be subject to a reasonably large IHT take. And that's fine. Because, yes, I've worked for my income. And I'd like my kids to enjoy some of that. And they will.But I also acknowledge my responsibility to society. I grew up in a society that paid me to receive a degree education and a post-graduate qualification. That came out of the tax of other people. And I think I've got a responsibility to pay in so that bright kids from poor areas in future can get those opportunities.It's about realising that your individual success isn't all about you.