I have no skin in this, but you might want to think about how the results for one group change the dynamics for the others.
To keep the numbers simple. Let's say you get an equal number of people for two separate schemes. They all pay monthly and plan to pay £200,000 per year over four years. Let's say one of these is to do with EBTs. Just as the case goes to the FTT after two years and cost 50% of the expected total (say £400,000 of costs out of £800,000 expected for both schemes). So the first two years' money effectively spent on the EBT scheme. As luck would have it, at the same time the Supreme Court hears the appeal of the Court of Sessions on Rangers and says Rangers loses. The FTT says, sorry, but you lose too because the Supreme Court is boss. All the EBT people then leave the group and stop paying.
So the remaining 50% then have to fund 100% of the second case.
So those who are in the EBT group pay £200,000 of their £400,000 costs and those in the second group have to pay £600,000 to get their case heard. That doesn't seem fair.
Now in real life there may be synergies, not all the money will be spent on the first case, you are planning four separate schemes, etc. But unless you do something to address it, it still goes back to those that remain effectively pay more than those that leave early.
To keep the numbers simple. Let's say you get an equal number of people for two separate schemes. They all pay monthly and plan to pay £200,000 per year over four years. Let's say one of these is to do with EBTs. Just as the case goes to the FTT after two years and cost 50% of the expected total (say £400,000 of costs out of £800,000 expected for both schemes). So the first two years' money effectively spent on the EBT scheme. As luck would have it, at the same time the Supreme Court hears the appeal of the Court of Sessions on Rangers and says Rangers loses. The FTT says, sorry, but you lose too because the Supreme Court is boss. All the EBT people then leave the group and stop paying.
So the remaining 50% then have to fund 100% of the second case.
So those who are in the EBT group pay £200,000 of their £400,000 costs and those in the second group have to pay £600,000 to get their case heard. That doesn't seem fair.
Now in real life there may be synergies, not all the money will be spent on the first case, you are planning four separate schemes, etc. But unless you do something to address it, it still goes back to those that remain effectively pay more than those that leave early.
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