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Re: The Chronicles of Rishi
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https://www.cableforum.uk/board/atta...0&d=1695232195
Nothing says "Long Term Decisions" than reading documents, in a suit and tie, on a bench on the USS Midway, which is a floating museum in San Diego Harbour*, whilst you were there in March 2023… https://www.midway.org/exhibits-acti...s/f-14-tomcat/ *I recognised the F-14 Tomcat, as we visited San Diego (and the Midway) a couple of years sgo |
Re: The Chronicles of Rishi
A retired jet on the deck of a retired ship. Message?
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Re: The Chronicles of Rishi
https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/3...a03c35b2b346a0
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https://www.gov.uk/government/statis...ics-commentary In totally unrelated news, if Inheritance tax was abolished, Rishi Sinai’s daughters would be £290 million better off when he died… |
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Inheritance tax is a racket. Everything I have amounted throughout my life, in which I have not ever had a day unemployed, the only money ever received was £10K from my late mothers very small estate, otherwise not received a penny that I didn’t earn. I’ve been taxed on everything I have already earned, on some things multiple times. What gives the state the right to tax me again when I want to pass on my hard work to my kids so they have a decent start. That’s what I’ve worked for. If Rishi scraps inheritance tax, along with his roll back on net-zero, he’s going the right way. With any luck he’ll come up with more. He might even get a hung Parliament if he’s lucky. |
Re: The Chronicles of Rishi
This week’s diarrhoea of policy announcements is looking increasingly like a core-vote strategy, in a desperate attempt to avoid them getting wiped out at the next general election. I can’t believe he thinks inheritance tax cuts actually have broad appeal.
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A massive chunk of the wealth inequality in this country arises from Boomers and Gen X’s who got on the property ladder before the mid 1990s when an average home was worth three times average wages (or less). Today it’s in excess of 7 times average wages. You didn’t earn that. Neither did I. Both of us have benefited from government policy deliberately crafted to make private homes into assets, and to generate a sense of wealth. |
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Rishi, should be treating every other month as giveaway month. There’s loads of stuff he could do, cheaply too. The majority Labour has to overturn is so big, the Tories just need to hang on to a few of those seats, and we get a Labour govt without a majority, or less likely a hung parliament. Rishi, should shamelessly go on the offensive. ---------- Post added at 22:30 ---------- Previous post was at 21:47 ---------- Quote:
We bought our current property in 2008, ( I wasn’t going to give actual values but I think I will, and everyone can judge me) at the height of the market for £400K, and everything went south. Probably lost a third or more of its value. But we we weren’t selling, so We spent around £250K extending and converting. In the last 15yrs we’ve spent at least another 200K. At least, probably more. Improving the curtilage of the property. Not forgetting how much you spend just maintaining everything. Not to sell on as an investment, but to enjoy and for my families future enjoyment and security. We’re not finished, currently redoing the bathrooms, and I hope to do more, maybe even build an Annexe, but i reckon we’ve spent well over a million and more, upgrading and maintenance. The property, is probably only worth about a million. This is Yorkshire a stone barn with near an acre of land. Not a 3 bed semi on London probably worth more. So I’ve made no money, and not looked to make money. It’s about quality. So don’t tell me I’ve made a colossal amount of money when I haven’t. And I have paid tax when I bought it, and on everything I’ve done to it ever since. And I shouldn’t have to pay tax when my kids get it. |
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At a population level my point stands. There is a vast, vast pool of unearned wealth in primary residences that are exempt from capital gains and are in real terms worth enormously more than when their owners purchased them. Our generation, and our parents, absolutely have coined it in, not only from the cash value of our homes increasing but from spells of inflation in the 1980s and again today, inflating away the mortgage burden. The only sort of tax anyone ever pays on any of this is stamp duty, although this is a tax on purchase of property, not a tax on the value of the one they’re selling. Notwithstanding any of the above, the abolition of inheritance tax wouldn’t have a revolutionary effect on you or me. It would however make a massive difference to the super-rich few, who already enjoy a great deal of unearned privilege thanks in no small regard to unearned wealth. The real societal benefit of a functional inheritance tax regime isn’t the amount of money it brings in in any given year but in its capacity to limit the development of a society where power and influence is concentrated in the hands of those whose great grandparents did something worthwhile. |
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The purchase of the property is just the first thing in the life of ownership. Absolutely everything after buying the property is taxed……everything. You tell me anything that I pay for in regards to the property after the initial purchase, that is tax free. Quote:
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In that case, define “super rich” and deal with it, rather than go after the working class that have worked and are trying pass on their efforts to their kids. Quote:
I had a shit childhood, in Thatchers Britain in Liverpool, in the 80’s. I left Liverpool in 89 as a teenager, and I’ve worked my bollocks off, with my wife, to transcend that, to give my kids, that are only 12 & 8 a better start in life than I had, and hopefully have chance to get on in a really difficult world, and you seem to advocate penalising that. You seem to be making it out that I, and others like me, are akin to Jacob Rees-Mogg. You need to take a step back, and rethink your position. This is the issue with inheritance tax, it’s a blunt instrument. |
Re: The Chronicles of Rishi
I am intimately familiar with the Liverpool of the 1980s, though to be honest a trip to the Littlewoods basement cafe in Church Street was a major treat compared to our usual forays around Birkenhead Market.
Your argument about tax paid on the things you buy for your house is besides the point. Unfortunately you chose to cut out the part of my post where I pointed out that I stand to have massively increased the value of my home simply by living in it in the long term and doing only what has been absolutely necessary to maintain it. I get that you’ve bought a fixer-upper and feel aggrieved at the idea of inheritance tax eating away at some of the capital you’ve invested in it but I still say you’re making yourself, as an outlier, to be too much of a case study. I don’t believe your experience is typical of the majority. Nor do I think it’s in any way confined to the south east of England. Even in the 1980s there were houses with swimming pools in the leafier Merseyside suburbs, some of them within walking distance of the Grammar school I was lucky enough to attend. And if you’re going to accuse me of being flippant, maybe don’t do it in the same post as suggesting I’m characterising you as Jacob Rees-Mogg. ;) Enough, anyway. Bedtime. |
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I don’t think we’re a million miles apart. I just think there should be a better solution than inheritance tax, as it stands. |
Re: The Chronicles of Rishi
Let's be clear, the "super rich" are really not in this IHT discussion. They are wealthy enough to have ways & means to circumvent this - look at the Duke of Westminster and his £9bn inheritance as an example.
The real problem for the rest of us is there are enough people, predominantly Tory voters, who only care about themselves and their own. This is who Sunak is targeting here. |
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I don't think this will be a major concern financially for the Conservatives but symbolic is that there a political cost to delaying climate change policies.
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