True, good point.Well, if that happened people would just transfer more earlier and avoid it (gifting enough, seven years or more before death, to be under the threshold).
True, good point.Well, if that happened people would just transfer more earlier and avoid it (gifting enough, seven years or more before death, to be under the threshold).
Anyone expecting an inheritance don't forget if either parent ends up in a care home that's 4k a month that's gonna evaporate...
So you want more of people’s eatates taxed? I don’t see why you couldn’t achieve that just by reducing the nil rate band.
Was that headline just the biggest work of obviousness ever? Previous generation is richest ever...of course the next gen is going to inherit that wealth when the previous gen dies? WTF?
Agrreed better educated criminals, lets just have some edcuated crime for gawds sake!
No, it doesn't beggar belief as the funds are being taxed at source, not receipt. This isn't income being transferred, it is capital. The capital is being taxed at a rate applicable to the donor.
But why? Tax has already been paid on that. Several times over in many cases!
One day, lad, all this will be yours.
Huge tracts of land, etc."What, the curtains?"
But why? Tax has already been paid on that. Several times over in many cases!
Most people have great success in avoiding inheritance tax on account of their estates being far too small.The initial theory was to stop the wealth staying with the top few % of people, now it seems only the top few % are the only people in a position to avoid paying it....
If one sibling gets out of bed every day, earns money for his family, pays tax on those earnings, and is a net contributor to the country, yet the second sibling gets to lay in each day while other people go to work to pay for their keep, then why do you want to penalise the net contributor and reward people who don't contribute?If two siblings receive an equal amount of inheritance, but one lives alone on benefits and the other earns £50k plus their spouse earns £30k, shouldn't the sibling in the better financial situation pay more tax on their inheritance share?
I say tax the first million at zero and then anything above that at a hundred percent. Leaving a million pounds to your descendants should be enough for anyone.
So it’s not going to be anything which’ll solve the big problem millenials face...buying a home to avoid horrific rents.Being offended by anything and everything