UK Treasury Is Giving Older People $90,000 a Year To Keep Working (bloomberg.com) 128
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Bloomberg: Convincing older British workers to stay in their jobs will cost the UK Treasury 75,000 pounds ($90,000) per person in tax breaks for some of the country's wealthiest savers, analysis of Chancellor of the Exchequer Jeremy Hunt's budget shows. In his budget speech on Wednesday Hunt scrapped the lifetime allowance on pensions -- the total that workers can pile into their retirement pot without incurring tax -- and increased the tax-free annual limit on contributions by 50%, to 60,000 pounds.
The shift is designed to reverse a trend in the number of older workers dropping out of jobs since the pandemic, which has contributed to a shortage of staff and is fanning inflation. But the Office for Budget Responsibility, the independent fiscal watchdog, calculated (PDF) that Hunt's pension reforms are likely to add just 15,000 more workers to the labor force by 2027/28. They will cost 1.1 billion pounds, meaning the reforms effectively offer a 75,000 pounds per person boost to those able to save enough in their pensions.
The shift is designed to reverse a trend in the number of older workers dropping out of jobs since the pandemic, which has contributed to a shortage of staff and is fanning inflation. But the Office for Budget Responsibility, the independent fiscal watchdog, calculated (PDF) that Hunt's pension reforms are likely to add just 15,000 more workers to the labor force by 2027/28. They will cost 1.1 billion pounds, meaning the reforms effectively offer a 75,000 pounds per person boost to those able to save enough in their pensions.
The rich? Or the elderly? (Score:3)
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The article also doesn't say whether the estimated cost of the tax cut factored in an economic stimulus effect - i.e. that these would-be-pensioners will now spend more money because
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The benefit is that the NHS stops seeing doctors retiring early because of this.
Thats the entire point of Hunts changes.
And these people arent "pensioners" in the traditional sense, its people that are being forced to retire at 55, 60 or whatever because otherwise they will end up with a huge tax bill if they retire later. Its literally people who can give another bunch of years service to the NHS, but are choosing to retire rather than have the dubious honour of having to pay a large tax bill just to work
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have the dubious honour of having to pay a large tax bill just to work longer.
You do not have a "large tax bill" because "you work longer".
If you work: your tax is mostly completely automatically deduced from your wages. And it as nothing to do with your age or length of period of your work anyway.
My taxes - and yours - are exactly the same, regardless if you are 65 and I'm 55 or anyone of us is 75.
Re: The rich? Or the elderly? (Score:1)
Iâ(TM)m not sure how rich one can be if you pay $90k/year in taxes.
Note this is a tax deduction, $90,000/year is basically 2 civil servants per citizen.
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Re: The rich? Or the elderly? (Score:5, Informative)
Reasonably well off, but not rich. And it not just about how much you put in your pension, but also it's growth. The main driver has been the fact that most senior doctors will hit this limit before the end of their careers. Suddenly in the last few years doctors have been hit with such massive extra tax bills, out of the blue, that many of them have simply decided it's no longer economical to keep working. The health service is already on its knees, this was an unnecessary unforced error adding to the exodus of staff.
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How about training more doctors and encouraging them to stay. While you may encourage doctors near retirement to work for a few extra years, it hardly seems like a long term solution.
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How about training more doctors and encouraging them to stay. While you may encourage doctors near retirement to work for a few extra years, it hardly seems like a long term solution.
Obviously you need to do both. Training more doctors is great, but it'll take years before they enter the workforce, and you need someone to cover until then.
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Many of them are rich. Not only do they have good salaries, they were able to buy property when it was cheap. Mortgage on their home paid off, lots of assets.
Senior doctors certainly fit that description.
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People do not just buy property because they could.
I'm 56 now, never bought anything that could be a reliability.
The idea that people bought property in int 1980s, or 1900s or 2000 and are nor rich: is just idiotic.
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It's not just property, it's a combination of things.
Cheap property, excellent pensions that are not available anymore, investments in publicly owned assets that were sold off like the railways, burning cheap oil with few concerns about the emissions...
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People do not just buy property because they could
Of course they do, as holiday homes, rentals, etc.
Re: The rich? Or the elderly? (Score:2)
If your definition of rich is a half-decent salary and being able to own a house, I feel sorry for you. Still, it is a scientific fact that gen z have it harder than anyone in human history before and should rightfully feel very sorry for themselves and hate everyone else.
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It's a sign of the huge equality gap in the UK. Traditional measures like income don't give the full story, because some who don't earn astronomically more than others also have property wealth and extremely good pensions that aren't even available for younger people to pay into.
Re:The rich? Or the elderly? (Score:5, Interesting)
Its not just "what you can contribute", the Total Lifetime Allowance is defined as "how much your pension pot is worth".
That means contributions plus earnings.
So if you have a good pension plan from an early age that has performed well over the years, you could be in breach of this on average earnings.
Certain final salary or defined benefit plans can also put you in breach of this well before you are "rich".
And the tax bill that comes due comes due instantly in most circumstances - if you have a pension pot which has outperformed the TLA by £200,000, then the moment you retire you have a tax bill due on that £200,000. Which is why people are retiring early - because they dont have the money to pay such a tax bill.
The story title is nothing but clickbait.
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Pretty much every pension advisor I have spoken to has told me what I posted above.
And your comments dont help if people are coming up to retirement with one pension fund...
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Outside of giant defined benefit pots that also don't allow tax free lump sums (rare) there just isn't a plausible scenario where the LTA leads to a problematic tax charge. If you had a single £2m pot (let's be lazy and call the LTA £1m) and didn't want to do anything particularly clever your options still b
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How well off these people are depends on your perspective. Final salary and defined benefit pension schemes were all closed off to new applicants years ago, because they are unaffordable. They relied on younger people continuing to see wage growth at the same rate that the boomers did, and once that stopped they had to downgrade pensions severely.
So in that sense anyone who has a final salary scheme probably is very well off, because they can retire and be financially secure. In fact the whole reason they a
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If he told me the sky was blue I'd look out the window.
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The Tory Party members selected Truss. Wisely the Tories didn't even ask them who her successor should be.
There was never much chance that Tory members would vote for an Asian man.
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Even the Tory party membership though Jeremy was a worse prospect that Liz Truss, and yet here he is, in charge of the purse strings. If I didn't have friends and family living in the UK I'd be laughing at the whole farce.
Re:The rich? Or the elderly? (Score:4, Insightful)
Unlikely, because trickle-down is a myth [slashdot.org].
Re:The rich? Or the elderly? (Score:5, Insightful)
It's not surprising to imagine a highly skilled engineer or surgeon adding more to an economy than someone asking you if you want fries with that.
Re:The rich? Or the elderly? (Score:5, Informative)
It's not surprising to imagine a highly skilled engineer or surgeon adding more to an economy than someone asking you if you want fries with that.
It's also not surprising to imagine the programmer working on the next DogeCoin or a real estate agent flipping property in London or a banker laundering russian oligarch money is contributing fuck-all to the economy.
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That link is referring to how much a person consumes, not how much value the work they do adds to the economy. It is irrelevant to the GP's comments.
Re:The rich? Or the elderly? (Score:5, Insightful)
A big issue with the Total Lifetime Allowance cap is that its hitting long term doctors - the NHS is seeing a lot of consultants and GPs retire because they are hitting this limit.
So keeping those people working does have a huge benefit to the economy.
Its not all about trickle-down economics, sometimes its about basic availability of services.
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Make it targeted then. Lots of programs do this.
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Not many countries limit the amount of wealth you can grow within a tax wrapper. ISAs have no limit either. Having one for pensions makes no sense. They are already annual contribution limits.
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They should have set up a new pension scheme to pay into as well. Those people have excellent pensions, and the more they pay in the greater the liability for younger people. Their pension payouts are guaranteed.
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That's what has happened. Younger people can't get those excellent pension schemes, but they still need to be propped up by other schemes that give their members less.
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The problem is exacerbated by an utterly ludicrous problem in the rest of our tax system. It's so utterly crazy that it never gets reported, probably because it's a bit complex and doesn't affect "ordinary hard working families".
Essentially, between 120K and 150K you enter tax-world. This is a world where time and space do not apply. I'm no expert, but it's something to do with the number of kids you have. Essentially, for each kid you have, you pay some additional tax in the 120-150 band. It works out that
Re: The rich? Or the elderly? (Score:5, Interesting)
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Ah....socialized medicine.
So full of, [ahem]....incentives.
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Nothing to do with it - in fact, a lot of those doctors work for the NHS (which pays a decent amount by national average standards), but their real "richness" comes from private work on the side.
The point is that once the pension allowance has all been used up, their tax rates go very, very high (to 100% or more). At that point then, you obviously stop working as hard - but then you look at your lovely pension pot and just think "well, I'm 55, I could just retire entirely" - and so they do.
Fixing the tax co
Bhwa ha ha ha ha... (Score:4, Insightful)
The current meltdowns over at Twitter and Facebook beg to differ with whether high income earners contribute the most. Never mind the Wall Street executives who keep crashing our economy with their out of control gambling.
Oh and Bernie Madoff was a very high earner. So was Elizabeth Holmes.
Our economy does not pay people relative to the work they do. If they did teachers and daycare workers would be making a lot more money. People make money relative to their ability to get paid and nothing else. A handful of rare specialty workers can command high salaries and everyone else is generally some form of scam artist shuffling money around and taking a percentage off the top while using their family connections to keep the scheme going..
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Why would you bring up Wall Street executives in a conversation about upper-middle class soon-to-be-pensioners in the UK? These are skilled professionals in multiple fields, presumably providing valuable goods/services to society. Which is why the UK gub'ment is working so hard to keep them in their positions.
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Upper middle class is not a high income earner,
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Well, I don't really feel wealthy, but then again, I'm among the top 3% earners in my country.
I frankly don't know what "class" I'd belong to. The only class I ever belonged to as far as I'm concerned was back in school, and even that wasn't exactly something where I felt I belonged to anything.
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The type of high income earners you are referring to are not the people others are referring to in these threads. And they aren't the ones being targeted by this government program. You are referring to the wealthy, while most of this thread and the legislation in question are referring to the upper middle class. These are the people this legislation is trying to get back into the workforce. Your comments about the wealthy are irrelevant to the conversation because they aren't going to be convinced to work
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Your'e dreaming. The top 10% pay 73.7% [taxfoundation.org] into total US federal income tax receipts. The bottom 50% pay 2.3% of total income tax receipts. It's all there and a million other places in black and white. You seem to be able to read Marx, why can't you read a spreadsheet or rendered HTML table?
Sure they do, because they are underpaying everyone else for their work. So those people have to be subsidized by the government just to be able to live.
If an owner of a company died tomorrow, no production capacity would be lost, if a person doing the actual work died, then there would.
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People earning high salaries presumably contribute the most to the economy, so encouraging them to keep working has the biggest benefit.
I *know* you know better than that. The people who contribute the most to the economy are producing and distributing food. Remove them and your economy is gone. There's a lot of others you can count as performing key functions. You really don't want to do without refuse collection or sewage treatment for any legth of time. Again, economy severely impacted without them. But e.g. film producers or actors or even say brain surgeons? Sure they produce something of value but you'd still have an economy if every
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Um, this isn't the 17th century, you know. The people contributing the most to the economy are people who provide the energy (mostly fossil fuels) that allow us to do anything at all, including growing food.
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Re:The rich? Or the elderly? (Score:5, Insightful)
How many non-rich people do you know who save >£40k in their pension per year or have saved over £1M in their pension over their lifetime?
This was probably done because of a high-profile problem where very experienced doctors were retiring early because they were in a silly financial position due to the pension rules. That doesn't look good when the NHS is falling apart around us all.
But it's unrealistic that either of these changes is going to help anyone who isn't already very well-off compared to most.
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The wealth distribution is skewed in this country partly because of the crazy property prices and the resulting inequality between homeowners and everyone else. Chances are that someone who's managed to accumulate a seven-figure pension pot is also old enough and well enough off to have significant property assets, putting them well inside that top 10% bracket you mentioned.
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or have saved over £1M in their pension over their lifetime?
There's a difference between being poor and being not-rich. You don't need to be rich to accumulate 1million pounds in your pension over your working life. That kind of effort would define you quite squarely as middle-class.
Re: The rich? Or the elderly? (Score:2)
You can't have an average income and take advantage of $90k credit per year... Therefore the title ain't completely wrong ....
to stop NHS doctors from receiving a tax charge (Score:5, Informative)
to stop NHS doctors from receiving a tax charge for saving to much
Re:to stop NHS doctors from receiving a tax charge (Score:5, Informative)
Precisely this.
The NHS is losing doctors because they are hitting the Total Lifetime Allowance limit - their only option is to retire before they get hit, so they are.
And right now, because the current government are arseholes, the NHS is bleeding doctors all over the place - they need these people to stay.
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Why would you want old doctors to stay? Give new workers a tax break, reduce spending on NHS.
Doctors do not get paid based on years of service, they get paid on relative experience. What you're suggesting is a cost saving measure of replacing highly experienced GPs, surgeons and specialists, with people who only just figured out how to spell penicillin.
It's no different than outsourcing IT work to some cheap incompetent person in India.
You need a steady stream of replacement workers, but if your cost saving measure is to remove experience and promote inexperience you'll quickly have a bad time.
Governments validate Orwell daily (Score:3, Funny)
I love this doubleplusgood speak, where not taking away something = giving it.
Re: Governments validate Orwell daily (Score:2)
Yea, what the heck is with this headline! We're taking now frow you ONLY 10k-1M, whatever it is I guess it'll fall in this interval = Giving Rich People $90,000 !
Can someone from UK explain? (Score:2)
Here in the United States we have something called 401k accounts where you can contribute money (pre-tax) and then withdraw that money in retirement and you have to pay tax on it then. Some people talk about 401k as being untaxed, but it's actually just not-yet-taxed. Is that what's going on here? In the short term you don't get the tax revenue, but in the long term you'll get it (with interest) or at least some of it?
Re: Can someone from UK explain? (Score:2)
Sounds about the same we can contribute to a pension tax free, but we pay income tax in our pensions later. But there are limits to how much tax free allowance you get per year, and also the size of the pot, which includes the growth of the pot, not just what you put in. So if pension grows very well you can find yourself with a tax bill. I think that's about the gist of it.
Re: Can someone from UK explain? (Score:5, Informative)
Pensions in the UK are tax free to contribute to, but are treated like normal income when you draw from them at retirement - so ultimately you still pay income tax, its just deferred. This is so you can get growth in your pension fund using untaxed funds.
The problem is, that pension fund is only allowed to grow to a certain amount (£1.07Million before these changes) before the excess becomes taxable - and the tax is due the moment you start drawing from the fund.
So, imagine this - you have a good pension fund, it has grown to £1.2M at the point you decide to retire. Thats £130,000 above the TLA limit.
If you take the excess as a lump sump, the tax bill is roughly £65,000.
If you take it as income (including annuity, drawdown etc) over a time period, the tax bill is £32,500.
Both of those tax bills are up front, not paid when you get the money.
Re: Can someone from UK explain? (Score:2)
In addition, under the NHS pension scheme the pot gets an annual revaluation. The increase in value can contribute to your annual limit, resulting in an annual tax bill (not deferred) based on money already paid in as well as your actual payments in the year.
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Ok, so I'm really not understanding this.
I hit the LTA at 55 with £1.07M in the pot. I retire, pay no tax that that point, and have £1.07M to live on for (say) 25 years, taxed as income.
As above, but I keep in working for 5 more years. I now have that £1.2M pot. I pay £65k in tax, but I've just worked for 5 years and can save for that bill. Even if it comes out of the pot eventually, that's still £1.135M in there, and it only has to last 20 years.
I really don't understand the d
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You're still better off working
No one likes to work for a paycut. You may be net positive overall but it still leaves you feeling shitty being penalised for doing what you always have done, especially at the end of your career when you're over working, a change in your conditions is often just the incentive you need to put both middle fingers up and head off to a life of watching daytime television.
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That's more-or-less correct. However we had limits on how much you could put in both in a single tax year and over the course of your lifetime, and after that you'd lose the tax at the point of saving the money while still having to pay tax on withdrawals, making pensions a very bad financial investment beyond that point. Those are the limits being changed here.
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Not just "put in", but also accrue in the pension pot - its a "total lifetime allowance" in the pension fund for you.
If you go over this, then the moment you start drawing from the pension fund you can be hit with a large tax bill - ie if you are over the TLA by a certain amount, the moment you retire, the HMRC can hand you a £50,000 tax bill (figure pulled out of my arse because the actual amount is based on how much you are over) due immediately. Who has that sort of money on hand?
This is what is c
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This has nothing to do with "rich people" (another fantastic Slashdot headline designed to be divisive), and everything to do with people who have contributed a lot to their pension fund over the years.
If you are approaching retirement with over a million pounds in your pension pot then by any reasonable definition you are rich, whether that money accumulated over a lifetime of contributions or betting perfectly on GME for a few days.
This statement is completely independent of any other statements about whether someone has done enough of value in their life to deserve that kind of money. You can be rich because you earned it or rich because you got lucky, but you're still rich.
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If you are approaching retirement with over a million pounds in your pension pot then by any reasonable definition you are rich
Most people think of a million pounds being a lot of money, but in a retirement account near retirement age it isn't as much as people think. 4% is the standard used to determine how much of your retirement savings you should withdraw each year for income, which is $40k per year for a million in savings. Not many people think a $40k salary qualifies you as rich. I'm not sure what social security looks like in the UK, but a $40k per year payout is pretty standard in the US for someone who was a well-paid wor
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If you go over this, then the moment you start drawing from the pension fund you can be hit with a large tax bill - ie if you are over the TLA by a certain amount, the moment you retire, the HMRC can hand you a £50,000 tax bill (figure pulled out of my arse because the actual amount is based on how much you are over) due immediately. Who has that sort of money on hand?
Probably the people who have over 1 million GBP saved. If not, they can take out a loan if necessary.
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Except it's not saved, as in, it's not in your bank account(s). You can't cash out your entire pension. If you could then the £50k or whatever tax bill you instantly get wouldn't be a problem as you'd have that in liquid assets.
£1m in a pension pot does not mean you're a millionaire. It just means there's a fund you can draw from of that value, and you can only draw a certain amount per year.
Think of it this way: you're employed at £50k a year with a guarantee that you'll be employed for 2
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Then why not change the law to allow you to take money out of your pension to pay your tax bill? It seems like a convenient excuse to reduce the tax bill for the rich, while stating its so doctors can keep working.
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Oh, I'm sure it's deliberate: reduce taxes for the rich and everybody else can work until they die.
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Problem being there's a shortfall in the "next generation" wanting to take up those jobs (one particular case: NHS doctors). A job that doesn't seem that attractive when those that are in that job are striking over pay and work conditions.
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That's the excuse that is given when their pay is below inflation for over a decade "oh, but it's a calling". Yeah, that's true, but people like to be paid fairly for the work they do. They aren't monks or nuns deliberately choosing a life by taking a vow of poverty and where the service is its own reward.
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>That's the excuse that is given when their pay is below inflation for over a decade
How is that different from most people? By far most people in the world today are getting an annual raise less than the rate of inflation. Look around, get out of your bubble and talk to the common folk. It's hard to cry for the rich doctors when you look around. Not many folks getting wage increases even close to the inflation rate, and that's been true for a lot of years. Benefit costs have grown faster than wages as we
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Who has that sort of money on hand?
Why can't you just draw that money down from your retirement fund and pay your tax bill with that?
Re: Can someone from UK explain? (Score:4, Informative)
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You're focusing a lot on just pay, and not focusing enough on the fact the someone new does not provide the same value as someone experienced. This isn't manual labour. The people who are forced into early retirement are people with valuable experience and are being replaced by inexperienced fresh starters ... assuming they are available in the first place, which they are not.
To put it another way, you're saying there's no downside to firing your experienced IT workers and outsourcing the entire department
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Or... you could execute a policy that smooths the transition without screwing up multiple generations in the process. Disruption has a social cost.
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The problem in the U.K. isn't that they have too many doctors. It is that they have too few doctors. According to the BMA, England has fewer doctors per 1000 (2.9 the entire U.K. is slighly higher at just over 3.0) than anywhere in the EU but Poland. Nearly 6% of all jobs for doctors are currently vacant. It is not as bad as the need for nurses (over 10% of nursing posts are unfilled), but it is still terrible. The reality is that most of the EU has a third more doctors per thousand than the UK does.
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That doesn't sound like what other people are saying, they seem to say you get taxed on the $1000 that you are over. Sure you have to pay the tax on the $1000 if you withdraw $0.01 from the savings though.
Re: Can someone from UK explain? (Score:2)
"giving" (Score:2, Redundant)
By giving, they mean not taking. That's the government's version of giving.
Iffy math (Score:2)
The budget is based on how many people the government thinks will go back to work, not how many the Office for Budget Responsibility thinks. This makes the sum per person mentioned in the article meaningless.
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To go by the article, "Hunt ... increased the tax-free annual limit on contributions by 50%, to £60,000", or an additional £20,000 per year. This means that, at most, the cost for one person is the tax paid on £20,000. If taxed at the maximal rate, 55%, this is £11,000.
That's the maximum loss from this scheme per year per person, which is far from £75,000.
In reality it will likely be much less than £11,000 per person. Also, the very rich actually have a lower limit, and n
Yep, that's the leftist perspective alright (Score:2)
UK Treasury Is Giving Older People $90,000 a Year To Keep Working
Unless it's s refundable tax credit, they aren't "giving" it to you, they just stopped taking it from you. Not the same thing at all.