Originally posted by malvolio
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If they are not paying tax here and they move elsewhere, then why do the far right keep whining that if these non-tax payers leave it will destroy the country. This is the same country they don't want to pay taxes in like genuine hard working people do.Originally posted by malvolio View Post
It's not illegal, it's avoidance. However if you remove the tax advantage they will simply take their residency and taxes back home or to somewhere more friendly, like the Caymans or Malta. It's very doubtful the seriously rich will start paying taxes they don't have to pay.
Live in the country where you pay tax on your earnings.
...unless these people are hell-bent on destroying the UK, because they hate the UK, while flag-shagging for their supporters.…Maybe we ain’t that young anymoreComment
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They are not paying taxes here, but the businesses and investments they are making in the UK certainly are. Remove the non-dom option and start charging them local taxation and they will probably take everything away. Except they do pay some personal taxes to retain their non-dom status at present, albeit indirectly.Originally posted by WTFH View Post
If they are not paying tax here and they move elsewhere, then why do the far right keep whining that if these non-tax payers leave it will destroy the country. This is the same country they don't want to pay taxes in like genuine hard working people do.
Live in the country where you pay tax on your earnings.
...unless these people are hell-bent on destroying the UK, because they hate the UK, while flag-shagging for their supporters.
But yes, everyone is out to screw the UK. Probably why we're the fifth biggest economy in the world.Blog? What blog...?
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If the only reason they live here is because they can avoid paying tax, then maybe they should go. This "we can't survive without them" argument seems like Stockholm Syndrome to me.Originally posted by malvolio View Post
It's not illegal, it's avoidance. However if you remove the tax advantage they will simply take their residency and taxes back home or to somewhere more friendly, like the Caymans or Malta. It's very doubtful the seriously rich will start paying taxes they don't have to pay.
If you want to reside in the UK, pay UK tax. If you don't want to pay local taxes, live somewhere else and just visit the UK for a holiday.Originally posted by MaryPoppinsI'd still not breastfeed a naziOriginally posted by vetranUrine is quite nourishingComment
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how naiveOriginally posted by d000hg View Post
If the only reason they live here is because they can avoid paying tax, then maybe they should go. This "we can't survive without them" argument seems like Stockholm Syndrome to me.
If you want to reside in the UK, pay UK tax. If you don't want to pay local taxes, live somewhere else and just visit the UK for a holiday.
https://www.statista.com/statistics/...ket-in-the-uk/
there are 19,000 people earning £1m+ a year, assuming they are paying around 50% tax is £9billion. If half rearrange their affairs that is a tax hole. if they then rearrange their employees how much is lost?
Tax them enough that it stings, if it hurts they have the means to move.Comment
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Many of us are wealthy enough to move country. Most of us don't.Originally posted by vetran View Post
how naive
https://www.statista.com/statistics/...ket-in-the-uk/
there are 19,000 people earning £1m+ a year, assuming they are paying around 50% tax is £9billion. If half rearrange their affairs that is a tax hole. if they then rearrange their employees how much is lost?
Tax them enough that it stings, if it hurts they have the means to move.
Tax should be set at a reasonable level and people should pay it. Lower taxes encourage businesses regardless if the owner is resident or not.Originally posted by MaryPoppinsI'd still not breastfeed a naziOriginally posted by vetranUrine is quite nourishingComment
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Your link is to taxpayers earning £1m+Originally posted by vetran View Post
how naive
https://www.statista.com/statistics/...ket-in-the-uk/
there are 19,000 people earning £1m+ a year, assuming they are paying around 50% tax is £9billion. If half rearrange their affairs that is a tax hole. if they then rearrange their employees how much is lost?
Tax them enough that it stings, if it hurts they have the means to move.
Not people living in the UK with a global income of £1m+
How naive of you to equate the two.…Maybe we ain’t that young anymoreComment
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Indeed so it seems the balance is right. The top 5% contribute nearly half the tax take. Plenty of tax free Islands out there or golden visas,Originally posted by d000hg View Post
Many of us are wealthy enough to move country. Most of us don't.
Tax should be set at a reasonable level and people should pay it. Lower taxes encourage businesses regardless if the owner is resident or not.
https://www.taxjournal.com/articles/...ives-on-in-tax
France gave up on their supertaxThe latest data from HMRC suggests that the top 1% of earners contribute 28% of all income taxes to the nation’s coffers, while the top 5% contribute almost half (48%).
And while a super-tax might sound like an appealing idea in principle to address perceived unfairness in the system, do we really want to get back to the days of Harold Wilson when the top income tax rate was 83%, and combined with a 15% surcharge on unearned income, the marginal rate reached a staggering 98%?
https://www.forbes.com/sites/jonhart...h=5fec2eee5df2
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Well obviously non doms don't count but everyone else doesOriginally posted by WTFH View Post
Your link is to taxpayers earning £1m+
Not people living in the UK with a global income of £1m+
How naive of you to equate the two.
https://www.gov.uk/tax-foreign-incomeComment
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I think you need to research where a lot of our wealth comes from. And how much of it is home-grown...Originally posted by d000hg View Post
If the only reason they live here is because they can avoid paying tax, then maybe they should go. This "we can't survive without them" argument seems like Stockholm Syndrome to me.
If you want to reside in the UK, pay UK tax. If you don't want to pay local taxes, live somewhere else and just visit the UK for a holiday.Blog? What blog...?
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