Time to Prepare
Since this has been looking gloomy for a while, i took a bit of time to chat to various advisors as to what the next steps would be if things went pear shaped, which they seem to be doing.
My own personal fear is that the revenue would enforce a sale of assets, which, although would probably cover my liability, would no doubt come at the worst possible time and leave me essentially homeless (which is my pension pot since that all went belly up) and bereft of any decent savings plan.
The advice i have been given, once HMRC decide they can go ahead and pursue; is that the process will pass through a number of different, unlinked and presumably hopelessly disorganised departments before it gets close to that stage. It does seem though, the critical point is to contact and agree a plan with them before it gets into the nonsense bureaucracy of the system, where the ball will be difficult to stop rolling. I would think you have to do this yourself, rather than rely on MP to do for you - if anyone would like the details of what i was told then please PM me.
By the way, i am not planning on doing anything personally at this stage, i will wait and see what happens once the dust settles, and only pursue this option when it is clear that all is lost...unless by some miracle we are offered a nice deal...right.
I think a valid point has been brought up around the way the case has been presented, i'm not a lawyer and presumably MP took the human rights angle as they thought that was the best chance of winning, but having read both judgements (this and the previous one) it seems that the problem with the HR angle is that it gives the judges the scope to decide if something was 'fair' rather than was it 'legal', and it seems nobody really wants to make a big decision on a point so woolly.
Whether or not the shiner case (not read it myself) has a better chance of getting somebody to answer the question of legality rather than fairness remains to be seen..i have to admit i am fairly pessimistic to the chances of any kind of court ruling this was not 'fair' to us, even the limp wristed eurocrats over in brussels.
One thing that is incredibly short sighted from the political view about all of this, is that i will never, ever, ever return to england to work and pay another penny of tax into the system after this shambles - as far as i am concerned the place can rot. Its not exactly an incentive to work in the country now is it ? I will of course, be claiming the pension which am i due, as my fair share
Since this has been looking gloomy for a while, i took a bit of time to chat to various advisors as to what the next steps would be if things went pear shaped, which they seem to be doing.
My own personal fear is that the revenue would enforce a sale of assets, which, although would probably cover my liability, would no doubt come at the worst possible time and leave me essentially homeless (which is my pension pot since that all went belly up) and bereft of any decent savings plan.
The advice i have been given, once HMRC decide they can go ahead and pursue; is that the process will pass through a number of different, unlinked and presumably hopelessly disorganised departments before it gets close to that stage. It does seem though, the critical point is to contact and agree a plan with them before it gets into the nonsense bureaucracy of the system, where the ball will be difficult to stop rolling. I would think you have to do this yourself, rather than rely on MP to do for you - if anyone would like the details of what i was told then please PM me.
By the way, i am not planning on doing anything personally at this stage, i will wait and see what happens once the dust settles, and only pursue this option when it is clear that all is lost...unless by some miracle we are offered a nice deal...right.
I think a valid point has been brought up around the way the case has been presented, i'm not a lawyer and presumably MP took the human rights angle as they thought that was the best chance of winning, but having read both judgements (this and the previous one) it seems that the problem with the HR angle is that it gives the judges the scope to decide if something was 'fair' rather than was it 'legal', and it seems nobody really wants to make a big decision on a point so woolly.
Whether or not the shiner case (not read it myself) has a better chance of getting somebody to answer the question of legality rather than fairness remains to be seen..i have to admit i am fairly pessimistic to the chances of any kind of court ruling this was not 'fair' to us, even the limp wristed eurocrats over in brussels.
One thing that is incredibly short sighted from the political view about all of this, is that i will never, ever, ever return to england to work and pay another penny of tax into the system after this shambles - as far as i am concerned the place can rot. Its not exactly an incentive to work in the country now is it ? I will of course, be claiming the pension which am i due, as my fair share
Comment