Originally posted by AtW
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Mini Budget aka Fiscal Statement
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Well, I just got my letter from HMRC ref my state pension. Lucky I'm not just relying on it...£8,898 a year. Now if £2500 minimum of that was just going on heating? -
If you were just relying on that you would get your £14 a week pension credit plus all the other benefits linked to you claiming that.Originally posted by Lost It View Post
Well, I just got my letter from HMRC ref my state pension. Lucky I'm not just relying on it...£8,898 a year. Now if £2500 minimum of that was just going on heating?"You’re just a bad memory who doesn’t know when to go away" JRComment
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I've long reckoned that state pension is way too low, and that increasing it would help older people exit the labour market, which I think would be a good thing, especially for those in regions where life expectancy is not that great.Originally posted by Lost It View Post
Well, I just got my letter from HMRC ref my state pension. Lucky I'm not just relying on it...£8,898 a year. Now if £2500 minimum of that was just going on heating?
Yet, 'almost a third of people did not expect to have any pension provision beyond the State Pension when they retired'
(source: https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulat...018tomarch2020)
I reckon that mine will probably cover utility bills and council tax - if it's not abolished by then!Comment
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Move to a nice little flat?Originally posted by Lost It View Post
Well, I just got my letter from HMRC ref my state pension. Lucky I'm not just relying on it...£8,898 a year. Now if £2500 minimum of that was just going on heating?Originally posted by MaryPoppinsI'd still not breastfeed a naziOriginally posted by vetranUrine is quite nourishingComment
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It's a bit daft, even by Hunt's own figures it saves something like 2bn a year which is nearly the smallest saving of the list.Originally posted by Unix View PostIr35 chat on BBC news nowOriginally posted by MaryPoppinsI'd still not breastfeed a naziOriginally posted by vetranUrine is quite nourishingComment
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But it's £2bn and the incremental effects of a bunch of smaller measures were quite large, plus the average Joe either doesn't understand it or works in an office with IT contractors and looks at them as "scumbag tax avoiders". Just read the comments in the FT any time there's an article on IR35Originally posted by d000hg View Post
It's a bit daft, even by Hunt's own figures it saves something like 2bn a year which is nearly the smallest saving of the list.
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The state pension is only vaguely viable to live off if there are two of you in a couple receiving it. Most of the big outgoings like heating, electricity, water, running a car etc are pretty much the same whether there's one person or two in a household.Originally posted by Lost It View Post
Well, I just got my letter from HMRC ref my state pension. Lucky I'm not just relying on it...£8,898 a year. Now if £2500 minimum of that was just going on heating?Scoots still says that Apr 2020 didn't mark the start of a new stock bull market.Comment
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It's not even £2bn in truth, it's more like a loss all things considered. As HMT have been told on numerous occasions: it seems we have another chancellor who is driven by the Treasury civil service rather than harsh reality.Originally posted by jamesbrown View Post
But it's £2bn and the incremental effects of a bunch of smaller measures were quite large, plus the average Joe either doesn't understand it or works in an office with IT contractors and looks at them as "scumbag tax avoiders". Just read the comments in the FT any time there's an article on IR35
Blog? What blog...?
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We all know that. But that is not the metric here. The metric is whether it can be squared with OBR (and, hence, the markets).Originally posted by malvolio View Post
It's not even £2bn in truth, it's more like a loss all things considered. As HMT have been told on numerous occasions: it seems we have another chancellor who is driven by the Treasury civil service rather than harsh reality.Comment
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