Originally posted by diseasex
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Reply to: This country is getting worse and worse
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Previously on "This country is getting worse and worse"
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Originally posted by northernladyuk View PostIf 20m people could access your pension fund, it would act as a strong disincentive against saving for retirement.
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Originally posted by diseasex View Postand 20m people cant.
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There's good reason why you can't access this money
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Originally posted by diseasex View PostJust had an email from my accountant that they take away any benefit from flat rate. That's about 2.4k a year less. Great.
Dividend tax increased. Again few k a year less
Pound tumbled ¬20%. Great. Iphones 100£ more expensive.
Absolutely massive competition when looking for contract. 30-50 per role in my area. Great
Want to build BTL empire? Think again.
I would like to have bought a BTL (and more over time), but I am put off for now. Bad for me, but great for the other people who may now be able to buy that property to live in themselves rather than funding my pension.
Invest in properties? Risky
And now Brexit, rise of racism, massive uncertainty.
Apparently there is a rise in racism (I haven't seen it personally, but I have no reason to disbelieve people who say it is happening, but I wouldn't believe it on the basis of Daily Mail and Daily Express headlines).
And we are in a period of uncertainty and I hope we get clarification soon on the direction, and I am sufficiently positive enough about Brexit to believe that ultimately Brexit will be smoke and mirrors - to the outside world Brexit will look like we're worse off with some weasel words but I do not believe that beyond the public rhetoric that there is a real imperative within the EU to make us worse off in the real world (why kill an economy which buys stuff from you to prove a point?).
I'm certain that the strategic appointment of Johnson, Davis and Fox into those positions in the cabinet was to keep extreme ultra Brexiters on side by having a public facing 'full on Brexit' image but as we know the real negotiations happen behind closed doors, not in public. The EU know this. We probably shouldn't have the 'no deal is better than a bad deal' line, there is no point in idle threats.
Uhh, back to the original point - we are phenomenally well paid for what we do, but we do have risk that there will be times where we have no work to do or that we cannot work. It is absurd, however, that we should be rewarded by the government for earning more money and paying a lower tax rate than our lower paid permie counterparts. For sure, hay should be made whilst the tax sun has been shining, but we shouldn't complain too loudly - we'll find little support for our cause in the 99% of the population who earn less than us, who can't afford to even buy their own house because we're busy buying property number 5 to rent to them.
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Originally posted by diseasex View PostOK it's fine, immigration etc. The problem is less and less oportunities to make a killing. Take years back , my friend (older chap) was doing tenders for Gov and then sold his limited for £7m. Now you can find tender but for 10k each peanuts. Take SDLT tax that kind of killed any property trading or BTL. I get it , housing bubble etc etc but where's the real money to make now?
That's capitalism through and through. An opportunity arises.
An individual or individual's take a risk and profit from it. First mover advantage.
The majority jump onto the bandwagon and compete the profit away until the activity becomes a commodity driven by low cost.
The thing is: There's no such thing as easy money. Never was. It only looks easy in hindsight.
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Originally posted by pjclarke View PostFTSE 100,
22.3.2016: 6192
22.3.2017: 7316
My pension portfolio up 15% since Trump. Next question?
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This country is getting worse and worse
Originally posted by diseasex View Postwhere's the real money to make now?
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but where's the real money to make now?
22.3.2016: 6192
22.3.2017: 7316
My pension portfolio up 15% since Trump. Next question?
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Originally posted by tomtomagain View PostThere are broad trends that have capped salaries and rates for the past decade.
* Management practices - outsourcing of jobs to from high-cost countries to low-cost countries.
* Technological development - rise of SAAS, PAAS, aka "The Cloud"
* Free movement of skilled resources from low-cost countries into high-cost countries.
* General market principals in which high-skilled roles command a high salary, which attracts thousands of people into that area, that eventually results in saturation of the market and thus results in the pushing down of salaries commanded by said role.
It's not a good/bad thing. It's just the way it is. Once upon a time bus drivers were the highest paid workers in the UK. Nowadays you wouldn't get more than £16k for driving a bus.
If you reflect on the trends you may realise that you have been a direct beneficiary of one or more of them.
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Originally posted by The_Equalizer View PostAnd 600K turn up to the UK each year. I presume they don't think it too bad either.
Just sayin'
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