Body & Soul2 mins ago
Cash In Hand, Morally Wrong?
68 Answers
http:// www.bbc .co.uk/ news/ma gazine- 1896867 9
We all do it but is it an innevitable consequence of our punative tax system or imply morally wrong?
We all do it but is it an innevitable consequence of our punative tax system or imply morally wrong?
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Inland revenue have a good idea how much money is "circulating" and how much tax is due on those amounts, there is always a shortfall, so to an extent it is theft but the ordinary working person does not earn sufficient taxable income to make a great difference with cash in hand. It is the large corporations and multi-millionaires , football clubs etc who find ways to avoid paying tax or come to an arrangement as to how much they will pay that create the largest shortfall.
There are different degrees and it is not black and white.
I use an odd job man and pay him cash. But from what I know he will be under the £10K tax threshold anyway. Cash means he does not do books (he is not too bright).
But I also know of someone with convictions for supplying drugs and money laundering. He had a self build house put up paid for entirely by cash in hand contractors. He was doing it on an industrial scale.
So I will turn a blind eye for small amounts, but large scale is different.
I use an odd job man and pay him cash. But from what I know he will be under the £10K tax threshold anyway. Cash means he does not do books (he is not too bright).
But I also know of someone with convictions for supplying drugs and money laundering. He had a self build house put up paid for entirely by cash in hand contractors. He was doing it on an industrial scale.
So I will turn a blind eye for small amounts, but large scale is different.
As the customer "morally" we don't know whether the tradesperson declares it, for all we know he does. Ok there is an assumption that cash in hand transactions are not always declared but we cant tarnish all builders, window cleaners, barbers, ice cream man etc......... with the tax avoidance brush. As a youth I did some labouring work, the guy paid me £200 per week in cash, never told me anything about tax or self assessment forms etc.... It was only for my parents telling me I needed to declare and showing me what to do. I could have run that risk, I was honest from the start