Originally posted by perfectlblue
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This clearly presents a dichotomy. I was in an IoM tax planning scheme where I paid relatively little tax, alhough probably still about as much as your average Joe.
I felt pushed into this scheme due to increasing uncertainty around my tax position: IR35. I started to feel that I was not just supporting those less fortunate than myself, but that the increasingly persecutory nature of taxation against my trade was making me shoulder far more than my fair share of society's burden. I felt this, and the level of risk I was being exposed to, was unjust so I left the UK to work abroad for a few years, in a far better tax regime.
I came back and decided I couldn't operate with the uncertainty of IR35 hanging over me daily and joined a scheme. Clearly this at least threatens the principle I laid out in my first paragraph but evidently, my first loyalty has to be to myself and my own family.
If the government said it's 25% tax across the board for everyone, I would have no problem paying that to support the less fortunate in our country. And I bet most other people feel the same.
It's the ever-tightening persecution of the successful that gets people's backs up and, in the end, we just say enough is enough.
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