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Previously on "Oh Dear: '1.5m more' face inheritance tax"
I think it should almost be a requirement that all citizens spend a year running a Ltd company. That way at least they wouldn't be ignorant of how much tax they really pay.
That, IR35, was also a good thing for me in an eye opening way. I realised that for someone like me Denmark actually has a much lower taxation rate than the UK. After the lie of lower taxes in the UK was exploded in my mind lots of others fell as well.
Still, it's only fair, eh? After all, the money has already been taxed (at least) once so another time does no harm. Just think how many teachers and nurses all that extra money wisely invested in public services will provide. Plus, of course, the excellent comical suggestion that the answer is to make the system more complicated.
I can't believe how ignorant I was about taxation until IR35 came along. The one good think about it was that it that really opened my eyes.
Rising house prices are to leave 1.5 million more people liable to pay inheritance tax, research suggests.
It means the number of people paying the tax would soar by 70% from around 2m in 2002 to 3.5m in 2009.
Financial advisors Grant Thornton and economists Lombard Street Research say the inheritance tax threshold had not kept pace with Britons' growing wealth.
The current threshold for the tax is £275,000, although this will rise to £300,000 in 2007.
The report suggests that instead of a single flat rate, there could be several bands with different tax rates.
Still, it's only fair, eh? After all, the money has already been taxed (at least) once so another time does no harm. Just think how many teachers and nurses all that extra money wisely invested in public services will provide. Plus, of course, the excellent comical suggestion that the answer is to make the system more complicated.
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