metalblue
Well-Known Member
Now Starmer has admitted they were going to put up income taxes I think that puts to bed the “no u turn here it’s all the media” argument.
Good to see you sticking to as many monosyllables as you can in your familiar empty abuse.The facts are very clear, as is your stupidity.
Have a good one.
The point is that in the end they didn't break the manifesto commitment not to increase the rates of tax.Now Starmer has admitted they were going to put up income taxes I think that puts to bed the “no u turn here it’s all the media” argument.
If you are going to use words you don't understand I suppose it's inevitable they'll be incorrectly applied. There was no mention of you being misled in my peroration. You have provided proof of nothing at all btw except your own gullibility. Starmer is entirely correct to question the motives behind the OBR timing of its PR publication at such a sensitive event for the national economy. It was intended to damage the chancellor's credibility and provided the Tories with propaganda to feed and mislead their supporters like yourself.
The point is that in the end they didn't break the manifesto commitment not to increase the rates of tax.
What other purpose than damaging the chancellor would realistically be served by publishing immediately after the budget?How do you know it was intended to do that?
Had a quick look and it seems you can give as much as you want. If you croak within 7 years then it counts towards iht.Not heard that one mate
Yep, the 3k per year there are no.negatives, its a bit stingy.though.Had a quick look and it seems you can give as much as you want. If you croak within 7 years then it counts towards iht.
Mason confirmed that there was no ‘lie’ but with absence of talk regarding the deficit, it may have been a bit misleading:Chris Mason on Radio 4 was trying to make sense of it - journalists (usual suspects) seem miffed about being misled but it didn't sound like he could pin down a lie. And if I heard right the Treasury had said there was a surplus.
I think people may have been hearing what they wanted to hear.
"All the news that's fit to print" - or all the news fitted to print?
Of course it does, not having to pay rent or a mortgage allows you to spend the money you have on other things, it fixes your cost base so you dont run the risk of the landlord putting up your rent or the bank increasing your mortgage repayment.If I buy a house for £100k and it is worth £400k when I die then was I wealthy? I'd say no because I haven't benefited, it is just numbers on a page. My children arguably benefit but they will likely lock that away in another asset so it's just dead money, it isn't wealth unless it gives you some improved standard of living.
Nope what Im saying is that there should be one set of rules that everyone plays by. The problem is, there isnt one set of rules or should I say not one set of rules that is accessible to all.To me, that sounds hypocritical. If you have absolutely nothing to pass on to your children or grandchildren then someone leaving £300,000 plus to their offspring is a life changing sum. Basically, what we are saying (I'm going to do the exact same thing) is that it is ok for me to pass on £300,000 plus but anyone richer than me is a greedy bastard and needs their arses taxed. i.e my morals cost me fuck all!
58% of the benefits go to pensioners. Are you suggesting everyone works till they drop?Well we could stop giving low skilled goons huge pay rises in the form of raising the minimum wage so far and so often which will create more jobs.
Getting all these lazy fuckers off benefits frees up billions of pounds for capital investment in sectors like AI which”ll promote growth and create jobs
Yes but that (his) argument only works if you assume productivity and growth forecasts are in the sole domain of the OBR and the Treasury is in the dark about what's in the OBR's figures. That's stretching things an awful lot.Starmer argues with some justification it should have been done at the end of the Tories term in office - bit of AI follows
Prime Minister Keir Starmer has said he was "bemused" by the timing of the Office for Budget Responsibility's (OBR) productivity update, suggesting it should have been published earlier, specifically at the end of the last Conservative government.
Starmer's key points regarding the timing are:
Starmer stressed that he is supportive of the OBR as an institution, which he considers "vital for stability," but criticised the timing of that specific report, calling the late release of the full budget analysis a "serious error" and a "massive discourtesy to parliament".
- Before the current government started: He argues that conducting the review at the end of the previous administration would have provided a clear understanding of the economic situation the new government was inheriting.
- Picking up the tab: By having the productivity forecast downgraded (which reduced the estimated fiscal headroom) 15 or 16 months into his government's term, Starmer claimed his administration was forced to "pick up the tab" for the previous government's failures.
- Impact on the Budget: The OBR's decision to lower its medium-term productivity growth forecast by 0.3 percentage points meant the government had £16 billion less in projected tax receipts than it would have otherwise expected, a factor Starmer cited as a difficult "starting point" for the recent Budget and a reason for the resulting tax rises.
Ah got you. You are talking about what happens in reality and the fact that the rich can 'buy' better accountants etc and therefore make use of loopholes (possibly designed to only be accessed by the wealthy themselves). I'd agree, all rules, laws, etc regulations should be the same for everyone. (However, would that mean there should only be one rate of income tax?)Nope what Im saying is that there should be one set of rules that everyone plays by. The problem is, there isnt one set of rules or should I say not one set of rules that is accessible to all.
Whilstever there is a way to circumvent tax and structure your affairs such that you avoid tax when passing on wealth avoiding IHT and the like then that is wrong. Particularly when the means to access such work arounds is only possible if you are exceptionally wealthy.
I’d get rid of triple lock for sure.58% of the benefits go to pensioners. Are you suggesting everyone works till they drop?
Tax relief for corporate entities is tripple the UK welfare bill. Yet, here you are picking on those who have the least.
What if pensioners don’t want to go back to work?I’d get rid of triple lock for sure.
Pensioners are a vast untapped source of potential growth. There are maybe quite literally millions of them who have a lot to contribute if the opportunity for quality retraining was provided. We can fund this by pretty much scrapping sickness benefit and not funding feckless fuckers who keep having kids and expecting everyone else to pay for them.
Without tax relief, businesses fold, unemployment rises and the welfare bill increases.
You're right, but the OBR sorts the wheat from the chaff from all the data and provides its stamp of approval on a final set of economic forecasts which the politicians are officially obliged to accept and work to.Yes but that (his) argument only works if you assume productivity and growth forecasts are in the sole domain of the OBR and the Treasury is in the dark about what's in the OBR's figures. That's stretching things an awful lot.
What other purpose than damaging the chancellor would realistically be served by publishing immediately after the budget?
They don’t have to.What if pensioners don’t want to go back to work?