Originally posted by tay
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Previously on "I (my company) wants to buy a new TV, I mean LCD"
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Originally posted by Pickle2 View PostJust buy it with your own cash and then stick in 40 taxi reciepts (download em blank off the web) as expenses to make back the cash. If the tax man asks, tell him you hurt your leg skiing and it was the only way to get to client site. Sorted.
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Originally posted by Fishface View Postget the Samsung 26 or 32 or 40 inch LCD which is a monitor with a TV facility.
I need one to work on 8 documents at a time on one screen.
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Originally posted by kookachoo View PostI'd really like a brand new TV, you know, HD flat panel 40" kinda thing. But I want my company to buy it!
Are you in business or just playing?
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Originally posted by xchaotic View PostYou may laugh, but where I used to work as a permie, we had Wii on the premises for us to use. I suppose as a means to increased productivity.
That was a fun time.
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Heart surgeons perform better after using a wii.
I worked on one project that proudly boasted it had provided a table football for use of the project members. As soon as the project began, we were instructed not to use it.
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Originally posted by xchaotic View PostYou may laugh, but where I used to work as a permie, we had Wii on the premises for us to use. I suppose as a means to increased productivity.
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You may laugh, but where I used to work as a permie, we had Wii on the premises for us to use. I suppose as a means to increased productivity.
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Originally posted by Pickle2 View PostGenius.
Line Item: £6.99, Stationary
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I'm confused
These arguments don't make any sense. How could you even use the company Wii without a TV?
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Originally posted by NotAllThere View PostIt's not a question of need, it's a question of exclusive business use. A company can buy what it likes, so long as what it buys is solely for business use. It's when there's a possibility of private use that it gets complicated.
In other words, if the TV costs £500, and you have access to it for private use all the time, then the private value would probably be £125/year (25%), the value to the business must be much greater than this.
How do you put a value on this? Hard to say, but IT equipment, if provided for business use, is deemed to always have a disproportionate business benefit relative to the value of the private use. So you can have access to a company laptop, which might otherwise cost you £300/year, but the value of you being able to do work for the company is far more than £300.
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In other words if you rent a real office (not a room in your home) you can fill it up with plasma TV's and all sorts of wonderful gadgets and leave it there when you aren't in the office and all is good.
If you do it at home however the IR will assume that you do not use these gadgets for business and will tax them as a BIK. One of the joys of being a small business that doesn't rent office space in <insert city/town here>
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It's not a question of need, it's a question of exclusive business use. A company can buy what it likes, so long as what it buys is solely for business use. It's when there's a possibility of private use that it gets complicated.Last edited by NotAllThere; 27 January 2008, 16:02.
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