Ok so tell me what the other scenario is. Is it in the Tory manifesto?
see the line you've not quoted in the post you quoted
Ok so tell me what the other scenario is. Is it in the Tory manifesto?
see the line you've not quoted in the post you quoted
No, forcing the entire UK to subsidise a national rail network just so Londoners/southerners can get cheaper tickets is stupid. British Rail sucked, things are better since it's demise.
Nonsense, dowie.
Plenty of working class and "poor" families have a family home, worth £150k or more. Because house prices were OK back in the 70s and 80s, remember? So that family house your (grand)parents bought for £40k is now worth £250k.
If you own a 250k house outright that you only paid 40k for then you're not poor and you've managed to accumulate 210k without working for it and without incurring CGT as it is your primary residence
yet you think it is justifiable for the working population to subsidise care that could be paid for from that asset even though that working population contains many people who can't even afford a deposit...
that is nonsense tbh.. especially given all your previous bleating about how unfair it is that you can't buy a house
No, forcing the entire UK to subsidise a national rail network just so Londoners/southerners can get cheaper tickets is stupid. British Rail sucked, things are better since it's demise.
As long everyone is clear what the Tory vision of privatised railways is
You don't understand the consistency of my argument because to you housing is an asset that should be judged on its monetary value.If you own a 250k house outright that you only paid 40k for then you're not poor and you've managed to accumulate 210k without working for it and without incurring CGT as it is your primary residence
yet you think it is justifiable for the working population to subsidise care that could be paid for from that asset even though that working population contains many people who can't even afford a deposit...
that is nonsense tbh.. especially given all your previous bleating about how unfair it is that you can't buy a house
if retired people living in 4 bed homes or occupying prime real estate in say central London want to downsize and free up that sort of property for others who might well make better use of it then that is probably a good thing... however disposal of assets to avoid paying for care has been discussed already in here and councils certainly can get you for it
What are they going to do if you spent it? Refuse you care?
If you say so. Does sound like you're trying to convince yourself your plan for retirement is OK though.So, work your nuts off to buy a house to fund your social care when you get old, or blow it all on coke and hookers and get looked after for free.
Regardless of if this idea is right or wrong is it actually going to benefit the country?
You don't understand the consistency of my argument because to you housing is an asset that should be judged on its monetary value.
For the genuinely poor - myself and my parents are 100% working class - a family house isn't an asset, it's a home, a basic necessity. Not having to pay a landlord 50% of my take home pay just to "live" does not make me wealthy. Although I am very glad not to be enslaved to some BTL landlord, that's for sure.
Having a house which is "worth" 250k does not make my family wealthy. House prices are insane, and we all know it.
In my world we should be able to pass down the family house from one generation to the next, because it's a fundamental necessity of life. Looking at it as a financial asset is meaningless. Because even if it's worth £500k, with another house also costing £500k to purchase, all we really have is a house, not a large sum of money. Without a house, we'd soon lose that money purely in rental costs.
Housing is stupid expensive atm, and many of the issues we are discussing here are only problems *because* of the runaway housing crisis.
I have no plans for retirement. I have a few private pensions but no doubt I will be dead by then.If you say so. Does sound like you're trying to convince yourself your plan for retirement is OK though.
A house is still an asset whether you want to believe that it is or not, I'm sorry that reality conflicts with your own imagination.
I think FoxEye's issues stems from his emotional view of his current home. For me (and I assume you dowie), my home is different from my parents' home. It was the family home when I was younger, but now it isn't, and it makes things a lot easier to separate.
In a way I see FoxEye's point, his parents' home is his home. Having to sell the family home to pay for care costs would make him homeless. Which then creates the moral question whether at least partly that asset belongs to him.