weegie01 wrote: Tue Oct 22, 2024 7:46 am
Tichtheid wrote: Mon Oct 21, 2024 11:43 pm
I think, perhaps, you’re ignoring the fact that half a million pounds plus 60% of everything above that is a heck of a lot of money.
Houses are selling for five, six, seven times the original price after 25 years without a penny of CGT being payable. If someone is fortunate enough to work in a sector where they also get a big private pension as well as being able to put money away in savings accounts where they make money on the capital via interest rates, then good on them, but put something back into the system that was so good to them. You can be sure that most will not be in that position.
Taxing the beneficiaries of a million pound estate to the extent that it leaves them with £800,000, really for no effort or even input on their part, doesn’t seem like an injustice to me.
And you are ignoring my basic point that it is unfair that, having paid a huge amount of tax on money when it was earned, you are then taxed again on the same money when you die.
You are also ignoring my point that it is a disincentive to wealth creation which has in our case made us decide it is no longer worth one us earning and paying income tax only to lose another 40% of what is left on death. Would you bother earning money if you you were ultimately going to lose almost 70% of it in tax?
It is not the beneficiaries who are being taxed. France has an inheritance tax system where the beneficiaries are taxed on what they receive relative to what they receive and their current financial position, we have a death tax system.
I am not for one moment ignoring how much money it is. I know it is a lot of money because my wife and I worked hard and were successful in building it. Along the way we created wealth and jobs and paid a lot of tax. The economy benefitted from our working lives and now our success is to be taxed and part taken away when we die.
The first point that sticks out there for me is referring to the French tax system, iirc, David Beckham agreed to donate his four million Euro salary at PSG to children's' charities because if he had accepted a penny he would be liable for all his international income being taxed in France, so it was cheaper to lose the four million - it's probably not relevant to this but it just popped into my head.
We pay double and triple taxes all the time - our income is taxed and we used that taxed income to buy goods and services which are subject to another tax, in the case of, say, a bottle of whisky, we pay duty and vat on it. If you buy a car you pay vat, road tax and insurance premium tax, then there's vat on garage bills. There are items such as children's shoes that are not subject to vat, but on practically everything else there is a secondary tax.
If I have investments I pay tax on the increase in value of the investments when I cash them in, if I have a private pension provision I get a quarter of it tax-free and I can ensure that I only pay low end tax on the rest by being careful when I draw down lump sums.
If I buy bonds with money I've earned and been taxed on, the same applies, I pay tax on the return when the bond matures. I'm stressing the point that tax will be paid on these assets at some stage
I don't accept the premise that I am paying tax when I'm dead, when I peg it and pass those assets on to my children they get the assets for doing nothing and they certainly won't have paid any tax on them.