So does that mean if your accountant gives you a choice of paying tax or you putting it somewhere else or buying some new toys, you would both opt to pay the tax?
It just comes directly out of my Pay each month...I don't get to choose

So does that mean if your accountant gives you a choice of paying tax or you putting it somewhere else or buying some new toys, you would both opt to pay the tax?
Sounds a bit like Greece.
In the case of Barlow...How many millions does one need? Its not like not finding the loopholes and exploiting them will have that much affect on his multi millions of pounds in the bank.
Spoken like a true simpleton with no real concept of money.
Barlow is small fry in terms of total wealth compared to many celebrities. Are you genuinely stupid enough to think that when you reach a certain amount of money you just stop caring about it and think "oh sod it, I'll stop looking after it"?
Every time you post you just make yourself sound more and more ignorant. A simple man with a simple outlook on life.
This. A lot of people don't understand the difference between tax avoidance and tax evasion.
Optional tax, how does that work?!?
Avoiding and Evading are actually synonyms. They can mean the same thing. The actual inference in tax law doesn't magically change that.
I guess it could be applied to ex-patriot British citizens, pay an optional 10% income tax (after bi-lateral taxation agreements have been applied ofc) or lose all rights to benefits, including the NHS on your return to the UK. This is actually how National Insurance works atm for ex-pats - unless they voluntarily contribute to get to a minimum number of years of full contribution they don't get the state pension.
Actually in this context they're not synonyms, and I don't mean context as in tax. There are 2 uses of avoid, only one has evade as a synonym.
If you are rich enough to live in Monaco for 4 years so that on re-entry you no longer have to pay income tax, then private healthcare and pension is a non-issue really.
That doesn't disprove my point...
Yes because it is a synonym even in the context of this thread.
No it's not, e.g.
To prevent delays avoid the closing doors.
Is not the same as
To prevent delays evade the closing doors.
2 words can be synonyms, not always in the same usage.
E.g.
To avoid paying tax put your savings in an ISA.
Is different to
To evade paying tax put your money in an ISA.
transitive verb
1
: to elude by dexterity or stratagem
2
a : to avoid facing up to <evaded the real issues>
b : to avoid the performance of : dodge, circumvent; especially : to fail to pay (taxes)
c : to avoid answering directly : turn aside
3
: to be elusive to : baffle <the simple, personal meaning evaded them — C. D. Lewis>
— evad·able adjective
— evad·er noun
What does your anecdote prove?
Merriam-Webster provide 3 definitions of evade.
If people you can see the difference between avoid, dodge and evade, for 2b then I'm puzzled.
"I dodged tax on interest by using an ISA".
"I avoided tax on interest by using an ISA".
"I evaded tax interest by using an ISA".
As long as you aren't accustomed to using evade and avoid in a legal context, there is no difference there.
2b synonyms are dodge and circumvent not avoid. I'm really not debating tax here so you know, I have no desire for that. I'm debating semantics of the English language!
I would personally.
As a Christian, I believe in doing what is morally right.
As they say, money is the root of all evil...
I don't think it's as clear cut as you say.
My second set of sentences which is more applicable demonstrate why. Avoid can be used in that sentence. I don't see why you can't use avoid.