1) I doubt others would follow. Or not many, anyway. To close a business is relatively easy, but starting a direct replacement is much harder, and is an option that may only be open to those that have, or have access to, similar levels of capital.1) True enough based on the facts that follow but if they did leave there is a strong possibility others would take up that position. Its a hypothesis with some credible backing already
2) You are of course correct in many regards and have shown how it works for selfish people and those who have the thinking of greed is good. Morally its wrong. The other massive flaw in that idea and the jobs being lost is that consumers dictate demand and in true true true reality the people operating at that level of wealth directly employ very few people and the business generates the income. If customers demand the product someone who has topped out at 100m make they will not just close the business as other interested parties would be looking for a deal of some kind. Market force is the prevailing factor that debunks that argument here (otherwise we are not a market driven economy (which of course we are))
3) Agreed but it takes a hard a d harsh vector to change that view
4) Again I agree in principle, if I won the Euros I'd have a property somewhere in the Caribbean although for vastly and drastically different reasons. To prove my point look at the number of non lived in homes that are there purely as a way to evade tax eyes from other countries in London.
5) of course we may see "brain drain" but market forces dictate. New thought: If this is the case do we think that this cabal of people are now so rich as to truly show that fairness in wealth is now nigh on impossible and the have it alls will forever have the have little to nothing-at-alls forever over a barrel? Its as has been said: Workers today are far more productive yet work for comparatively less while the majority of capital gained goes to the higher echelons. Its what Bernie is saying as we have seen trillions of dollars moving from the middle class to the richest corporations and people. That is irrefuteable. There is less to be had for most now
1) I doubt others would follow. Or not many, anyway. To close a business is relatively easy, but starting a direct replacement is much harder, and is an option that may only be open to those that have, or have access to, similar levels of capital.
It also presupposes that a vacuum is left in the market. This may not be the case. The wealthy person may retain the businsss, but move tax residence. The jobs from businesses would remain, but the government loses all tax revenue on personal income, capital gains, inheritance, etc. Or, the wealthy person moves abroad and shifts manufacturing abroad too, but keeps existing customer contracts. The jobs, however, go abroad. I know one family that did exactly that, though it was a dispute with an intractable union not a tax issue. The company got round that intractable union by shifting all manufacturing abroad. Of about 140 employees, a dozen or so were offered relocation packages, and about half accepted and emigrated. The rest? I do know the company lost very little business, reduced prices because vists were lower, and even increased product quality. Not much changed, except the country where the jobs existed, and as a byproduct not an objective in that case, the entire family, and their not inconsiderable wealth, left the country.
2) It's morally wrong to not be prepared to work for nothing? To object to the government charging you 100% on income? I don't agree. What matters isn't whether it's wrong or not, but what works. What's the objective of a Chancellor increasing a tax rate? Is it a moral campaign against the rich, or is it to raise tax revenue? I suggest the clue is in the "R" bit of HMRC.
4) Tax evasion isn't the only reason for empty homes, if you're referring to expensive houses, often in London. In many cases, if's not even in the top two reasons. One major reason is that they're seen as good investment vehicles, given the level of house price inflation. A second reason for foreign owners having houses here is exactly the same as why very rich people here have houses overseas. That is, not keeping all your eggs in one basket. Suppose you had that £100m? Do you think you might store a decent chunk of it abroad where it's out of the grasp of UK tax authorities? And entirely legally. Rhere's nothing preventing UK taxpayers owning assets abroad, provided you declare taxable foreign income and pay any tax due on capital gains on disposal

I was in the pub earlier and it had sky news on with subtitles. There was some story about Jimmy Carter not paying his taxes...![]()

Right, but the point is that modern politics is moral outrage for badly understood reasons, and then a good bit of stoking the fire carried out by the press. Cameron was happy to use this to his advantage when condemning Jimmy Carr, so the pleas to leave Dave alone because he did nothing illegal are going to fall on deaf ears as far as I'm concerned.
He couldn't go as far as saying Jimmy Carr broke the law back in 2012 so he resorted to turning taxation into a moral issue, he should have stayed out of it then and he wouldn't look so daft now. Obviously hindsight is great.
If he was brave he and the conservatives would take this opportunity to clean up the rules and the mess of the UK tax system on the side. As well as promote moral responsibility
If Cameron has previously slated and berated those who carry out tax avoidance, but then proceeds to do it himself; at worst he's a hypocrite and his credibility is shot. However, the Jimmy Carr story was tax evasion, so I can see why the PM would use this in his argument.
People work hard, they pay their taxes, they save up to go to one of his shows. They buy the tickets. He is taking the money from those tickets and he, as far as I can see, is putting all of that into some very dodgy tax avoiding schemes.
That is wrong. There is nothing wrong with people planning their tax affairs to invest in their pension and plan for their retirement – that sort of tax management is fine. But some of these schemes we have seen are quite frankly morally wrong.
The government is acting by looking at a general anti-avoidance law but we do need to make progress on this. It is not fair on hardworking people who do the right thing and pay their taxes to see these sorts of scams taking place.
Only people the can defend the nonsense avoidance evasion debate are those already weLthy enough to pay. Politicians need to be very careful to ride well within the lines. Regardless if it's legal or not it's hugely embarrassing for him and rightly so.
Did Cameron even avoid tax? I thought he paid income tax on the income, then there wasn't capital gains to pay because it was below the threshold?

Yeah, but he invested in a company that avoids paying tax...
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Yeah, but he invested in a company that avoids paying tax...
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Yeah, but he invested in a company that avoids paying tax...
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Why should a worker of this country have any faith in a politician who avoids taxation? They cannot avoid tax.
The politician moralises about sections of the country and then takes decisions about penalising sections of the country.
If he wants to play that game then he should avoid politics.
Otherwise it is just a case of do as I say not as I do and the public belief in corrupt politicians will be strengthened.
ALL politicians should by law have to show annually their tax statements and if found to be hiding/evading/avoiding tax then they should be kicked out of Parliament.
Have you read any of the posts above?
A few, why?