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Quote from: Bristol Red Rover on November 20, 2023, 11:11:22 amQuote from: Bentley Bullet on November 20, 2023, 10:47:06 amIt seems as it stands, that paying inheritance tax is optional, and you can opt for ways of avoiding paying it. That seems fair enough. If you don't agree with avoiding paying it, you can choose to pay it and rest peacefully in heaven while your family actually do the forking out for your generosity.In a different scenario, if IHT is abolished you can donate the equivalent to a charity or something.Charity - we don't need taxes at all really. Scrap them all, people will give to charity.JR-M for PM! Is that an answer or just a silly outburst?
Quote from: Bentley Bullet on November 20, 2023, 10:47:06 amIt seems as it stands, that paying inheritance tax is optional, and you can opt for ways of avoiding paying it. That seems fair enough. If you don't agree with avoiding paying it, you can choose to pay it and rest peacefully in heaven while your family actually do the forking out for your generosity.In a different scenario, if IHT is abolished you can donate the equivalent to a charity or something.Charity - we don't need taxes at all really. Scrap them all, people will give to charity.JR-M for PM!
It seems as it stands, that paying inheritance tax is optional, and you can opt for ways of avoiding paying it. That seems fair enough. If you don't agree with avoiding paying it, you can choose to pay it and rest peacefully in heaven while your family actually do the forking out for your generosity.In a different scenario, if IHT is abolished you can donate the equivalent to a charity or something.
Quote from: Bentley Bullet on November 20, 2023, 11:19:17 amQuote from: Bristol Red Rover on November 20, 2023, 11:11:22 amQuote from: Bentley Bullet on November 20, 2023, 10:47:06 amIt seems as it stands, that paying inheritance tax is optional, and you can opt for ways of avoiding paying it. That seems fair enough. If you don't agree with avoiding paying it, you can choose to pay it and rest peacefully in heaven while your family actually do the forking out for your generosity.In a different scenario, if IHT is abolished you can donate the equivalent to a charity or something.Charity - we don't need taxes at all really. Scrap them all, people will give to charity.JR-M for PM! Is that an answer or just a silly outburst?" if IHT is abolished you can donate the equivalent to a charity or something"My point is charity is not a solution. You know that. So why mention it? It is very much the kind of thing JR-M would champion along with the rest of his Victoriana.
Last time I checked, charities didn't pay for railways or the armed services.
People being charged IHT have also paid tax on their income, as well as their spending, and are now unfairly having their hard-earned wealth taxed a third time upon death.
Quote from: BillyStubbsTears on November 20, 2023, 06:22:10 pmLast time I checked, charities didn't pay for railways or the armed services.Who the f**k suggested they did? Are you being deliberately stupid or just on the wind-up?
Charity is not a solution to what?
Quote from: Bentley Bullet on November 20, 2023, 06:25:45 pmQuote from: BillyStubbsTears on November 20, 2023, 06:22:10 pmLast time I checked, charities didn't pay for railways or the armed services.Who the f**k suggested they did? Are you being deliberately stupid or just on the wind-up?
Quote from: Bentley Bullet on November 20, 2023, 06:23:55 pmCharity is not a solution to what?It's not a solution to redressing the inherant imbalances in a "free" economy. That is part of what tax is about. Charity can come on top of that, the cream on the cake if you like. You were suggesting taking away a progressive tax to be replaced by donations that would inevitably mean less would go to basic needy causes. That creates an impoverished society. Is that what you want? JR-M does.
Quote from: Bentley Bullet on November 20, 2023, 03:03:40 pmPeople being charged IHT have also paid tax on their income, as well as their spending, and are now unfairly having their hard-earned wealth taxed a third time upon death. Tax helps adjust the inherant imbalance in a "free" economy, IHT is one important check/balance in this. It enables lots of good things including raising the prosperity of a state - it benefits everyone. The "loss" from IHT is fairly minimal for inheritees who have anyway likely benefitted from relative prosperity that fell into their laps. It's win win for them.As I said earlier, the problem with IHT are the loopholes some of which have been outlined above, and the offshore scams. They should be closed.
DDNobody in this country pays no tax.
Quote from: BillyStubbsTears on November 20, 2023, 08:26:56 pmDDNobody in this country pays no tax.Who mentioned anything about "no tax", i clearly mentioned income tax, a tax that a large proportion pay none of.
You want to go off and try to "ultimately decide on" living your life in a way that incurs zero indirect tax?Good luck.
If you are in a certain financial position , you can contribute a substantial amount of your salary into your pension with substantial tax relief. You can in fact contribute 100% of your current salary into a pension pot, with certain tax caveats. Thereby paying no income tax on that salary at all.
Quote from: normal rules on November 20, 2023, 10:28:52 pmIf you are in a certain financial position , you can contribute a substantial amount of your salary into your pension with substantial tax relief. You can in fact contribute 100% of your current salary into a pension pot, with certain tax caveats. Thereby paying no income tax on that salary at all. That's right but they only pay tax relief up to a 60k maximum. anything over that is better invested in an ISA.
Quote from: danumdon on November 20, 2023, 10:46:26 pmQuote from: normal rules on November 20, 2023, 10:28:52 pmIf you are in a certain financial position , you can contribute a substantial amount of your salary into your pension with substantial tax relief. You can in fact contribute 100% of your current salary into a pension pot, with certain tax caveats. Thereby paying no income tax on that salary at all. That's right but they only pay tax relief up to a 60k maximum. anything over that is better invested in an ISA.Trouble is with ISA’s is their 20k limit per person per financial year. Something I do think should be re visited by the govt.
Quote from: normal rules on November 20, 2023, 11:09:28 pmQuote from: danumdon on November 20, 2023, 10:46:26 pmQuote from: normal rules on November 20, 2023, 10:28:52 pmIf you are in a certain financial position , you can contribute a substantial amount of your salary into your pension with substantial tax relief. You can in fact contribute 100% of your current salary into a pension pot, with certain tax caveats. Thereby paying no income tax on that salary at all. That's right but they only pay tax relief up to a 60k maximum. anything over that is better invested in an ISA.Trouble is with ISA’s is their 20k limit per person per financial year. Something I do think should be re visited by the govt.There is talk of increasing the threshold of certain ISA's that will be invested in "UK sourced investments" sounds like a sure fire way to loose a bundle if the current UK stock market returns are anything to go by.
"China, India and Russia all have no inheritance taxes. Several developed countries, including Australia, Israel and New Zealand, have chosen to abolish inheritance taxes in order to create simpler tax systems and encourage the creation of wealth, whether through investment or entrepreneurship."