lol
Milan.
p.s. Angel, just ignore them, your posts are great and show real promise, keep going
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Reply to: How Contracting Has Changed
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Previously on "How Contracting Has Changed"
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FFS, please do so and release us from your tedious ramblings.Originally posted by angeleyes View PostI'm seriously considering early retirement now. I made some very good property investments plus have a small pension built up. I could cash in and give two fingers to the lot of them.
What next, posting crap pictures?
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I ain't reading all that. I'm happy for u tho. Or sorry that happened.
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this is a cool thread, reminds me of the old days
Angela love, can you start some more threads, your view on the world is a breath of fresh air
Thanks
Milan.
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In short.... MF Version
(1) Whine Whine Whine
(2) Not as Good as it used to be
(3) ******* Labour Stabbity Stab
(4) MTFU
(5) I'm gonna bleed the Radiators
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AI long bulletin.- Early Contracting & Permie Mistake – Started contracting in the late 2000s, took a perm job thinking it’d be career progression, but ended up overworked and undervalued. Quit after being overloaded with impossible deadlines.
- Golden Contracting Years (2010-2015) – Thrived during the Lib Dem coalition, easily moving between contracts with no gaps.
- IR35 & Post-Pandemic Hustle – IR35 crackdown made contracting harder, but managed to stay outside IR35 until 2020. Got furloughed during the pandemic, then enjoyed a brief boom from 2021, even working two remote contracts simultaneously.
- Current Market Struggles – Last two years have been tough, with long gaps between short contracts. Rates have dropped, fake job ads are rampant, and agencies are condescending about employment gaps.
- Considering Early Retirement – Frustrated with the current contract, clueless management, and the overall state of the market. Weighing the option of retiring early, thanks to good property investments and a small pension.
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quite.Originally posted by unixman View PostAn amusing read, with ups and downs that sound familiar.
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74% effective take home? Yes please.Originally posted by Ketto View PostIf you’re struggling to get outside IR35 and retirement is a realistic option, why not take some inside IR35 and plough it into pension for a few years? Retirement could be quite a bit cushier.
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Your explanation sounds much like it was written by Whitehall/Labour central office, unfortunately, it is the cost of government that is central to our problems. The key indicator is GDP per capita; this has been flatlined since 2008 coupled with a steady climb in liabilities. On the current trajectory, we are heading towards a fiscal crisis and likely state default. We cannot tax our way to prosperity, as Rachael from customer complaints has succinctly demonstrated.Originally posted by WTFH View Post
Thankfully it's not finished, but hopefully it will get better if we are given a chance rather than tax dodging doom-mongers talking it down all the time. Most of the media is owned by non-doms and foreign businesses and need to increase the profits for their shareholders, so they rely on doom scrolling.
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Here’s the summary that ChatGPT gave me. It is not very good at counting the number of letters in a word is it?Originally posted by northernladuk View PostCan someone translate this in to a few sentences using words no longer than 6 letters please?
The user shares their ups and downs as a contractor. They started in the late 2000s with low pay and moved to a permanent job, which became overwhelming. Returning to contracting brought success during the Lib Dem coalition but later struggles due to IR35 rules. Post-pandemic work briefly thrived but slowed again with long gaps and low rates. Frustrated with current conditions, they consider early retirement, supported by property investments and a small pension.
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