briantrumpet
Squire
It is piss poor security, who is their sys admin, the CEO's ten year old sprog?
By 14 they'd know how to hide 'stuff' away from parents.
It is piss poor security, who is their sys admin, the CEO's ten year old sprog?
Are the loans interest free?
Asset appreciation improves the banks security for the loan, unless the asset is sold, it doesn't pay the loan.
What a dopey bitch.
Next April EVs will be paying VED
View: https://x.com/AutoPap/status/1993981440099303496?t=aU2HRGrhedyyEq2I4zFWVg&s=19
She didn't get the point he was asking the first first time, but the did at least indicate MOTs might be an option. Second time she answered it fully, albeit it indicates there is as yet no answer.
The question of the flat fee part of VED wasn't asked and is not relevant. She didn't talk about fuel duty either, or taxes on Jaffa cakes. What's your point?
Again, don't go into Politics. Tax has increased on savings interest. Savings interest is not income tax, it's tax on savings.Income tax rates have increased on savings
Yep. It's a brilliant plan to stop people switching to EVs. You are spot on.What I do know is that I will be nursing my middle-aged diesel for a lot longer before going Electric. It has £30 VED for life, no car payments and is surprisingly frugal on the fuel. For those EV owners with a drive and home charging, the cost model still works even with the pay per mile tax. For me in an urban area with no access to such, EV fuel costs were highly marginal at best since the public charging network pricing is insanely high. With the extra EV tax, it is simply uneconomic - an irony because urban environments are exactly where EVs should be most beneficial to improving air quality.
Again, don't go into Politics. Tax has increased on savings interest. Savings interest is not income tax, it's tax on savings.
The promise is kept.
Loans are not interest free, but I imagine they are a level of interest we cannot access as mere mortals without billions in assets.
Billionaire gets loan from bank for lifestyle. Bank charges some interest. I assume interest gets paid via asset sales and taxed but this is far lower than asset sales to fund lifestyle (although I wouldn't be too surprised if Bank adds interest to original loan so nothing is paid back immediately). Loan get rolled over indefinitely by bank until billionaire dies when the loan is repaid from the assets and is useful for lowering estate taxes whilst also using the "step up rule" in the US to reprice said assets at time of owners death.
Bank is happy - they have a long term return with the interest on a very low risk loan (unless said billionaires fortune completely vanishes). Billionaire is happy because they pay tax on the much smaller amount of cash they need to service the debt than from the actual income value they enjoy.
It is called the "buy/borrow/die" strategy if you want to look it up. I think the US were looking at methods to close the loophole but this was in 2024 and Trump happening probably put the brakes on this.
Honestly, it forms part of the assessment for income tax. It is the savings rate of Income Tax.
You really should go into politics twisting reality to fit semantics.
Loans are not interest free, but I imagine they are a level of interest we cannot access as mere mortals without billions in assets.
Billionaire gets loan from bank for lifestyle. Bank charges some interest. I assume interest gets paid via asset sales and taxed but this is far lower than asset sales to fund lifestyle (although I wouldn't be too surprised if Bank adds interest to original loan so nothing is paid back immediately). Loan get rolled over indefinitely by bank until billionaire dies when the loan is repaid from the assets and is useful for lowering estate taxes whilst also using the "step up rule" in the US to reprice said assets at time of owners death.
Bank is happy - they have a long term return with the interest on a very low risk loan (unless said billionaires fortune completely vanishes). Billionaire is happy because they pay tax on the much smaller amount of cash they need to service the debt than from the actual income value they enjoy.
It is called the "buy/borrow/die" strategy if you want to look it up. I think the US were looking at methods to close the loophole but this was in 2024 and Trump happening probably put the brakes on this.
No of course I'm not, but they will receive income from different sources which are taxed in different ways.BTW are you really trying to argue that the wealthiest in the country don't generally use legal avoidance methods to ensure they pay signficantly less tax than they would if taking all their income as PAYE?
No of course I'm not, but they will receive income from different sources which are taxed in different ways.
But so far, CR has only come up with dividends being taxed at a lower rate than income from employment, which ignores the reward for taking risk, and the fact the underlying investments (if holding shares) are also subject to Capital Gains tax), and Stowie has come up with a loanback scheme that almost certainly falls foul of the UK and EU anti Avoidance rules.
Maxing out pensions, drawing PCLs, maxing Isas, using investment bonds either onshore or offshore, using VCTs and EISs are all methods used by ordinary people.
You have a good idea what do for a living, and I don't hear anything other than rumours, usually from people who don't know. Holding investments in certain juridictions means no tax paid there, but you still have to pay tax if you repatriate the money.....
So what are these wonderful other ways that the rich avoid paying taxes? Genuinely i'm curious.
Capital gains is also lower than income tax, and is only applied on sale. The trick of living off loans has also been mentioned. The reality is that if you have enough money to play those tricks, your effective tax rate is lower than if that income came through PAYE.