Good luck send me a visiting order and i may come and visit you in jail.
I have never taken out unemployment protection cause there is a loophole that states it is invalid if you are self employed or have been for so many months e.t.c.
If you become a contractor  you will be able to afford your mortgage anyway so whats the problem stop being as tight as a duck's rear
					
					
					
				
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Reply to: Mortgage question
				
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Previously on "Mortgage question"
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He will have to wait for puberty to kick in first....Originally posted by Ardesco View PostI love this bit
Some kid still living at home who thinks he has found a way to buy a house without having to work....
Just get the slapper next door pregnant, our wonderful government will ensure that she gets a house for herself and the kid and you can nip round whenever you like while claiming your own benefits for sitting at home and doing flip all.....
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I love this bitOriginally posted by CodeMonkey76 View PostHi,
"Setup your limited company with 2 directors. You as one and your wife or mother as the other. Then resign after a short period with reasons of stress.
Some kid still living at home who thinks he has found a way to buy a house without having to work....
Just get the slapper next door pregnant, our wonderful government will ensure that she gets a house for herself and the kid and you can nip round whenever you like while claiming your own benefits for sitting at home and doing feck all.....
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Originally posted by Swiss Tony View PostFFS As you will be classed as ‘self employed’ in their eyes, your mortgage protection insurance will be void anyway. Perhaps a better solution would be to take out some life assurance and then kill yourself, saving us all allot of bother.
HTH
 
Where is the coffee meet screen emoticon?
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Good luck with that - let us know how you get onOriginally posted by CodeMonkey76 View PostHi,
I am looking at entering the world of IT contracting. I have been in the IT Development industry for about 10 years and having had a string of disappointing jobs over the last 3 years has focussed my interest in setting up myself.
Anyway, having met and spoke to many contractors in my career, I heard something that might prove useful should it be true. It would help reduce the risk.
Can someone confirm or deny what I was told?
It was this:
"Setup your limited company with 2 directors. You as one and your wife or mother as the other. Then resign after a short period with reasons of stress.
Your partner then hires you back to perform a contract for a client. Say 3-6 months work.
Then once you finish the clients contract, your partner lays you off (makes you redundant).
Assuming that you have a mortgage and mortgage payment insurance, you can claim against it for being made redundant. Therefore paying your mortgage while you are not working.."
Regards,
CM.
					
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Very intelligent Tony. I bet you are the pride of your parents!
Might I just say, that I was informed of this by a contractor of some 20+ years and was only asking as it seemed a bit dodgy myself.Originally posted by Swiss Tony View PostFFS As you will be classed as ‘self employed’ in their eyes, your mortgage protection insurance will be void anyway. Perhaps a better solution would be to take out some life assurance and then kill yourself, saving us all allot of bother.
HTH
Anyway, thanks for the flaming. Nice to know questions are welcome and the forum is filled with human beings!
					
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FFS As you will be classed as ‘self employed’ in their eyes, your mortgage protection insurance will be void anyway. Perhaps a better solution would be to take out some life assurance and then kill yourself, saving us all allot of bother.
HTH
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Stay permie. You're too <insert perjorative adjective here> to make it as a contractor...Originally posted by CodeMonkey76 View PostHi,
I am looking at entering the world of IT contracting. I have been in the IT Development industry for about 10 years and having had a string of disappointing jobs over the last 3 years has focussed my interest in setting up myself.
Anyway, having met and spoke to many contractors in my career, I heard something that might prove useful should it be true. It would help reduce the risk.
Can someone confirm or deny what I was told?
It was this:
"Setup your limited company with 2 directors. You as one and your wife or mother as the other. Then resign after a short period with reasons of stress.
Your partner then hires you back to perform a contract for a client. Say 3-6 months work.
Then once you finish the clients contract, your partner lays you off (makes you redundant).
Assuming that you have a mortgage and mortgage payment insurance, you can claim against it for being made redundant. Therefore paying your mortgage while you are not working.."
Regards,
CM.
And the other bit that worries me - having had a string of disappointing jobs over the last 3 years - I think you need to look at yourself rather than your employers.
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Originally posted by CodeMonkey76 View PostHi,
I am looking at entering the world of IT contracting. I have been in the IT Development industry for about 10 years and having had a string of disappointing jobs over the last 3 years has focussed my interest in setting up myself.
Anyway, having met and spoke to many contractors in my career, I heard something that might prove useful should it be true. It would help reduce the risk.
Can someone confirm or deny what I was told?
It was this:
"Setup your limited company with 2 directors. You as one and your wife or mother as the other. Then resign after a short period with reasons of stress.
Your partner then hires you back to perform a contract for a client. Say 3-6 months work.
Then once you finish the clients contract, your partner lays you off (makes you redundant).
Assuming that you have a mortgage and mortgage payment insurance, you can claim against it for being made redundant. Therefore paying your mortgage while you are not working.."
Regards,
CM.
What the fluckinghell????
Insurance fraud police alert
					
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I do believe this is called fraud. Although saying that, the only people I've ever heard actually getting a payout from an insurance company have been fraudsters.
					
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I never ever take disability or unemployed cover. There are too many loopholes to stop things like that.Originally posted by CodeMonkey76 View PostHi,
I am looking at entering the world of IT contracting. I have been in the IT Development industry for about 10 years and having had a string of disappointing jobs over the last 3 years has focussed my interest in setting up myself.
Anyway, having met and spoke to many contractors in my career, I heard something that might prove useful should it be true. It would help reduce the risk.
Can someone confirm or deny what I was told?
It was this:
"Setup your limited company with 2 directors. You as one and your wife or mother as the other. Then resign after a short period with reasons of stress.
Your partner then hires you back to perform a contract for a client. Say 3-6 months work.
Then once you finish the clients contract, your partner lays you off (makes you redundant).
Assuming that you have a mortgage and mortgage payment insurance, you can claim against it for being made redundant. Therefore paying your mortgage while you are not working.."
Regards,
CM.
Insurance is a wonderful thing until you come to claim.
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Originally posted by CodeMonkey76 View PostIt was this:
"Setup your limited company with 2 directors. You as one and your wife or mother as the other. Then resign after a short period with reasons of stress.
Your partner then hires you back to perform a contract for a client. Say 3-6 months work.
Then once you finish the clients contract, your partner lays you off (makes you redundant).
Assuming that you have a mortgage and mortgage payment insurance, you can claim against it for being made redundant. Therefore paying your mortgage while you are not working.."
 
 
 
Erm yeah. No that won't work.
Either you will hold some shares for divi's hence self employed or you won't in which case you'll have to pay yourself PAYE to get the required history for a mortgage.
Also you'd have to have a permanant employment contract with yourco not be a contract with it so you would need to do more than just one contract....i.e. it be open ended.
Plus I'm pretty sure that the insurance will have a clause against this.
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Mortgage question
Hi,
I am looking at entering the world of IT contracting. I have been in the IT Development industry for about 10 years and having had a string of disappointing jobs over the last 3 years has focussed my interest in setting up myself.
Anyway, having met and spoke to many contractors in my career, I heard something that might prove useful should it be true. It would help reduce the risk.
Can someone confirm or deny what I was told?
It was this:
"Setup your limited company with 2 directors. You as one and your wife or mother as the other. Then resign after a short period with reasons of stress.
Your partner then hires you back to perform a contract for a client. Say 3-6 months work.
Then once you finish the clients contract, your partner lays you off (makes you redundant).
Assuming that you have a mortgage and mortgage payment insurance, you can claim against it for being made redundant. Therefore paying your mortgage while you are not working.."
Regards,
CM.Tags: None
 
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