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Oh dear: "International business is like a flock of birds"

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    #11
    Originally posted by wendigo100
    Gordon doesn't know what this is.
    Gordon knows it very well, that's why he keeps "higher rate" of tax the same, but push more people into it and get most of tax from indirect taxes like fuel duty, VAT etc: house price bubble allows people to borrow lots more, so effectively Gordon pushed debt off his own books, so it all looks okayish.

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      #12
      Originally posted by AtW
      Gordon knows it very well, that's why he keeps "higher rate" of tax the same, but push more people into it and get most of tax from indirect taxes like fuel duty, VAT etc: house price bubble allows people to borrow lots more, so effectively Gordon pushed debt off his own books, so it all looks okayish.
      That's irrelevant to the graph. Ask the CBI.

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        #13
        Originally posted by wendigo100
        Gordon doesn't know what this is.



        Every generation we get a bunch of socialists who think they can make it work, and every generation we have to clear up after them.
        I blame them for the ERM, black wednesday and 15% interest rates. Those were the days when your house was worth less than your mortgage. Halcyon days!
        I remember the good old days of this site when people used to moan about serious contractor related issues like house prices and immigration. How times have changed!?

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          #14
          I've already moved abroad but that was due to Thatcher. Doing well out English companies at the moment though.
          Brexit is having a wee in the middle of the room at a house party because nobody is talking to you, and then complaining about the smell.

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            #15
            A good and welcome article that.

            For nearly 2 years now Gordon Brown & the bouncers at the Treasury have been whinging on and on about tax avoidance based on 'their own' estimates. Estimates based heavily on the fact that tax receipts keep falling. Despite their cocooned belief that the economy is healthy.

            Numpty's graph illustrates Brownstuff's problem. The more he taxes the less he'll end up with. And the cocooned dickhead hasn't a clue why ... other than his stupid assumption it is tax avoidance responsible.

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              #16
              Originally posted by bobhope
              I always imagine Gordon Brown to be Darth Vader, the Inland Revenue the Storm Troopers and the Contractors as Princess Leia (well Milan anyway):

              GB: Darth Vader
              Blair: The Emperor
              Hewitt: Tarkin

              Contractor: Governor Hewitt, I should've expected to find you holding Brown's leash. I recognized your foul stench when I was brought on board.

              Hewitt: Charming to the last. You don't know how hard I found it signing the order to legislate IR35.

              Contractor: I'm surprised to find you had the courage to take the responsibility yourself.

              Hewitt: Before you are taxed to death, I would like you to be my guest at a ceremony that will make IR35 operational. No contractor will dare oppose Emporer Blair now.

              Contractor: The more you tighten your grip, Hewitt, the more contractors will slip through your fingers.



              And that's really the problem. Brown fails to grasp that the tighter he squeezes and the more bureaucracy he adds, the more people will look for ways not to pay tax.
              Woah...déjà vu...
              If you think my attitude stinks, you should smell my fingers.

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                #17
                the point

                You all seem to have missed the point.
                They are now equating tax avoidance and tax evasion as one and the same. That is a very worrying thought and nobody is raising any concerns.

                What you notice is that unless you're handing over 90 percent of your income to the taxman then it's "not fair". Why attack the small guy when somebody like Phil Green declares millions in dividend and pays no tax as his Mrs isn't resident in the UK (I'm sure they must have a joint account - s660a attack ?). We're structuring our affairs the same way.

                You need to donate/loan Liebore a million quid to get IR35 revoked. Any other new laws require trips to your ranch, holiday island, cowboy suit, etc.

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                  #18
                  Originally posted by BobTheCrate
                  Numpty's graph illustrates Brownstuff's problem. The more he taxes the less he'll end up with.
                  Oy. That's my graph. Give it back.

                  It is a Laffer curve, which implies that there is an optimum level of tax.

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                    #19
                    Originally posted by wendigo100
                    Oy. That's my graph. Give it back.

                    It is a Laffer curve, which implies that there is an optimum level of tax.
                    And it is worth pointing out that Laffer curves exist only in the imagination of those who wish to persuade the government that it's a good idea to reduce tax rates. They are not graphs of actual measurements, simply visual aids to a certain hypothesis. That is to say, their premise may be false.

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                      #20
                      My view on avoidance / evasion has definitely shifted. When IR35 first came out and a few people I knew signed up for the whole EBT thing, I thought "what's the point, you may as well pay the tax." These days, I think it's our moral obligation to avoid paying any tax. The government has lost any moral authority.

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