It's A Snowflake...shut Things!
News1 min ago
No best answer has yet been selected by mcb123. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Totally agree with DMA. It is a double tax and I completely disagree with it existing in the first place, and now they want even more of it.
That money has already been taxed as income tax, capital gains tax, we're taxed on everything we spend it on (well almost) and then we die and the government claim nearly half of it back again. Surely there's something inherently wrong with this.
Does it exist in other countries?
Inheritance tax has been with us in one form or another for over a hundred years and Margaret Thatcher's government introduced the present system so no particular political party can be blamed or credited with it.
It's based on the priciple that the income is unearned by the beneficiary which seems fair when you look at it like that, especially where there's a threshold of over a quarter of a million pounds!
So it sounds like you're saying "I should get a quarter of a million drop in my lap and not have to pay a penny tax on it?"
Still it could be dumped but you've got to balance the books so you need to find about �3 billion or so that's what roughly 1% on income tax.
How much do you hate it? would you take a 1% raise to pay for that? It would mean that people who had no prospect of inheriting from a large estate would subsidise those from wealthy backgrounds
gary_baldy. These days it's not just the rich that are affected by inheritance tax it's the ordinary man and woman in the street. Just think of what houses are worth these days. And I bet if you suddenly inherited a couple of thousand you wouldn't say 'no'
Also Inheritance Tax is very cleverly avoided by the very rich. Interesting programme on the TV last night showing how the rich cleverly avoided any form of tax!! So again, it's poor old 'Mr Average' that gets to cough up. It makes me want to spit.
I agree with the premise of the tax itself - to make some attempt to prevent the gap between rich and poor ever widening. However, the threshold is too low, and I would prefer it to be graduated, only getting up to 40%, perhaps higher, for large estates.
There will always be schemes to reduce the amout of IHT payable, in the same way there are always schemes to minimise income tax. This will never change, and the people most able to pay for the advice will always be the ones who benfit most. But if we take this as an excuse to abolish a tax, then we would have to abolish all forms of taxation.
Still, whilst the Daily Express is ranting about IHT at least it is giving something else a rest.
A sliding scale's not a bad idea miss Zippy but I suspect the maths doesn't add up at the rates you suggest.
You're starting by doubling the treshold the and only doubling the rate for estates over �1million, I think you'd hit a shortfall.
I'm not too convinced either about the arguement about cash-poor people being hit. If Inheritance tax was payable by a spouse on the death of their partner you'd have a point but I don't think that's the case.
I suppose there are a few cases where people are still living with their parents when they die and have to sell up and move on to pay the tax but they must be very few and far between.
Remember too it's possible to avoid this by transferring assets like houses to children, providing you then survive another 7 years (I think it is) there's no tax and a sliding scale up to then.
Rather depends on how much you trust your kids I guess!
Interesting this. I know someone who lived with his mother until she died very recently. He is of retiring age now himself, an only child and due to inherit the house. Does he have to pay inheritance tax now or when he sells the house, and if he dies whilst still living there will the state claim inheritance tax? The house is in a very expensive area although only a modest dwelling - but it is definitely well over the threshold.
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