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Child Tax

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  • Italy is a success story?

    My initial thoughts on the individualisation of the benefits (the £45k v 2 X £40k argument) was that it was done because the only way they can identify 'couples' is if they're married. A couple, each on £40k, would then be discouraged from marrying because they would 'lose' the benefit. Since encouraging marriage is stated Tory policy (because of the supposed benefits for communities and children's upbringing), they don't want to do anything that would reduce it.

    Child benefit isn't paid as some sort of income for scroungers or to encourage procreation (as someone said, if the main reason why you're having kids is the money, then you're not going to be a great parent). It's paid so that the child can have a minimum standard of living. The giveaway is in the name -it's for the child. Children of families with an income over £45k will get that minimum standard of living anyway, so there is a reasonable argument to say it's not necessary that they also receive child benefit. There is some merit to the argument about universality and talk about how just because a father (or mother where there's a stay-at-home dad) receives an income doesn't mean his/her spouse or children will see any of it, but I think it's not hugely unreasonable to believe that children in these households are doing OK, and limited resources could be more effectively spent.

    The point about the BNP, as I read it, was that a minority of people are affected by this, since only 15% of the population earn more than £43k. Why are the concerns of a (relatively) wealthy minority receiving so much concern when there are problems across the country?

    Finally, this is what happens when no hard questions are asked during an election about cuts. When the Tories did talk about cuts, their popularity dipped. I suppose people don't want to believe that they might be affected by cuts. It's all good in theory, but not on my doorstep.
  • Taxing shouldnt be proportional in the first place... and benefits should be a minimal amount so you can just about survive.

    Got in a big argument about this in economics last week
  • So you are advocating a flat tax and a basic benefit entitlement, I like the sound of that. I think the reason those affected by the child benefit cut are offish about it is because it has been announced on its own, where we are easily the biggest losers. If all the cuts were announced together you could get a better feel for where the burden lies. The suspicion is though that those of us just in the higher tax band with a single income will suffer disproportionately again when more cuts are announced. It is not us that caused the mess the country is in, but so far we are the ones who have been singled out, I could understand them wanting to make the higher earners pay more, but if they wanted to be fair they should stop all universal benefits, I'm sure people like Philip Green could get by without their winter fuel allowance, paid to every pensioner, even those who spend the winter in sunnier climes but have a state pension, not just those people who are working and striving to bring up kids. Why was this announced on its own ahead of the CSR in the next couple of weeks?

    I want to see the real wealthy 'share the pain' and those who scrounge off the state, not just statements about how they are very naughty, but cuts in benefits as time goes on. Plus why should the state pay for any children they have whilst on benefits? If you enter benefits with 1 child, that is all you should be paid for. Encouraging welfare dependancy is no good to the claimants or the tax payer. Unfortunately the fear of not wanting to be seen as the nasty party will mean that any real attempts at change will probably be watered down to the extent that the doleies will run rings round them.

    Phew, glad to get that off my chest.
  • edited October 2010
    aye but that 15% are probably disproportionately more likely to vote, and probably more likely to have voted tory this time.. not forgetting its a hung parliament
  • edited October 2010
    Good points Steve - I like what you say about not increasing benefits for people who choose to have more children when already on benefits.

    These are tough times. As I said above none of the parties wanted to talk about cuts or the deficit because those topics were not vote winners.
  • Saga that's true but this makes it seem they are hammering hardworking families, yet the rhetoric said otherwise, and despite that group being less likely to have disposable income to spare - why not just up the basic rate of tax and make everyone pay a bit of the deficit, now that would be fair
  • [cite]Posted By: razil[/cite]Saga that's true but this makes it seem they are hammering hardworking families, yet the rhetoric said otherwise, and despite that group being less likely to have disposable income to spare - why not just up the basic rate of tax and make everyone pay a bit of the deficit, now that would be fair

    The Tories would tradditionally look after big business at the expense of the workers, so no surprise there.
  • Looking back to its origins, the child benefit started out post war as a way to encourage people to re-populate our battered country and extra money was paid for the second and third child. Then the idea shifted so that the state acknowledged that families deserved recognition for the extra financial burdens they would bear in rearing the next generation and it thus evolved into a universal benefit for all children and was eventually paid to mothers. But we now live in a very different and affluent age, so I think it's fair to take a look at the whole benefits system and the ridiculous bureaucracies it has spawned. But I also want to look at the ways in which the very rich exploit tax loop holes and shelter their wealth. Provided that the genuinely needy are well provided for ( and this is not easy to do), and provided that the very rich take a proportional hit as well, I'm not averse to discouraging welfare dependancy, in fact it could be a very positive thing to do. But it would need to be a cohesive, well considered long term plan and to be just and fair before I'll buy into it. No-one likes having money taken away but I think it could gather public support if it is seen to be fair. My fear with the Tories is that they will always find ways to protect their wealth and disproportionately hit the poorest and neediest. The current Churchillian mode adopted by Cameron worries me, appeals to naked patriotism always worry me, but time will tell.
  • Am I right in understanding they're also planning to cap monthly household benefits to £500?
  • Bit more generous than that, but it may well force some people to move to cheaper housing areas.
    ............................................

    Chancellor George Osborne has announced plans for a maximum limit on the amount of benefits one family can claim.

    He told the Conservative conference the cap would be set at the amount "the average family gets for going out to work", which is about £26,000 a year.

    The cap will apply to the combined income from benefits including things like jobseekers allowance, housing benefit and council tax benefit.

    An estimated 50,000 households may be affected by the cap, planned for 2013.
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  • These all seem to be good, fair proposals I'm sorry to say. Can't see any reason at all that people who don't work and don't have any wish to work should be getting more than 26k. A damn sight less, to be honest. Plenty folk like nurses flog their guts out for the public good, manage on a lot less. I appreciate that with a larger family this means that there's not going to be money for any luxury, but it's always been my thought that smartphones, flatscreens, Sky and fags aren't basic human rights. They're stuff that you can get if you graft for them. That view seems to have shifted somewhere in the last while.

    Of all the views expressed here I found Ken's (from way back on pp1) the most interesting. All too often people are selfish so they'll decry a sensible or fair move purely based on its effect on them rather than any real concern with parity, so it's nice to see someone actually not doing that. The idea about moving funding into child care is a great one: incentivise people on lower incomes into the workplace. Could be managed through a tax break, I reckon it's a great idea.
  • " It is not us that caused the mess the country is in,"

    I'd just like to point out that we all like to blame banker for the mess, and you are implying that no bankers earn over £44k so wont be the people losing the benefit.

    Whereas I would say all bankers who were involved in the credit crisis earn well over £44k and at least some will have children.

    So that statement is far from true.
  • ... and to add to that it was largely normal people borrowing lolly that they failed to pay back that actually put the banks in a mess. That seems to have morphed into being the fault of "greedy bankers" because that's easier than blaming greedy/daft people. Now politicians are pressuring banks to take away some of the lending contraints that they've put in place, basically because people are moaning that it's tough for them to get mortgages and loans.

    Also, this free-cash bail out the banks got was actually in the form of preference shares, which will get paid back @ 8% interest. Not what people want to hear I know, but there hasn't been any handouts to rich (and indeed not-so-rich) bankers. Never mind though, lets keep blaiming them for all our ills.
  • [cite]Posted By: andyaddick[/cite]
    [cite]Posted By: Off_it[/cite]
    [cite]Posted By: kinveachyaddick[/cite]Off It, presuming you are married, I think the likelihood is that there will be a marriage tax allowance introduced so your wife can transfer her !0k tax free to you in addition to your £10k so you''ll be a net winner overall from this - assuming it happens

    I'd better get a ring on her finger then!

    Serious point though. What if the kids weren't mine and we were living over the brush - would that make a difference? Should it make a difference? What happens if you no longer live with your missus/kids but have a responsibility for their upkeep? And then what happens if she moves another fella in for a bit who is a higher rate taxpayer? Then say he disappears and she moves another one in who is on the dole? Do I stop paying when the firsst bloke comes in or not? If I do, do I have to start paying again when the dole merchant rocks up?

    Questions questions. I feel a trip to the Jeremy Kyle studios coming on here.

    Im with you on this Offit, my other half at the mo a zero income, tho when she goes back will have 40+ which takes us over the 'limit'. We worked out that we would be better off if i moved back into the house I rent out and she claimed every thing as a single parent ! System is bollox
    Fair play if you're prepared to forgo rental income and living with the family in order to get some benefits. Personally I don't see it as bollox that high rate tax payers won't keep getting benefits when the country is short of money for basic services.
  • [cite]Posted By: andyaddick[/cite]
    [cite]Posted By: Off_it[/cite]
    [cite]Posted By: kinveachyaddick[/cite]Off It, presuming you are married, I think the likelihood is that there will be a marriage tax allowance introduced so your wife can transfer her !0k tax free to you in addition to your £10k so you''ll be a net winner overall from this - assuming it happens

    I'd better get a ring on her finger then!

    Serious point though. What if the kids weren't mine and we were living over the brush - would that make a difference? Should it make a difference? What happens if you no longer live with your missus/kids but have a responsibility for their upkeep? And then what happens if she moves another fella in for a bit who is a higher rate taxpayer? Then say he disappears and she moves another one in who is on the dole? Do I stop paying when the firsst bloke comes in or not? If I do, do I have to start paying again when the dole merchant rocks up?

    Questions questions. I feel a trip to the Jeremy Kyle studios coming on here.

    Im with you on this Offit, my other half at the mo a zero income, tho when she goes back will have 40+ which takes us over the 'limit'. We worked out that we would be better off if i moved back into the house I rent out and she claimed every thing as a single parent ! System is bollox

    I would be better off if I sold smack on the streets.

    I strangely don't find the desire to acquire money quite strong enough to want to break the law for it.

    Good job its only the bankers who are greedy ;-)
  • I don't think anyone who is bemoaning the loss of this benefit is doing so because they will be personally hit, I'm certainly not and fully support efforts to reduce the state, it is being singled out I don't like. On top of this I hear the rail companies will be allowed to charge up to 10% a year fare increase to make up for reduced subsidies, tax allowances will be frozen or reduced for middle and high income earners, VAT is going up, childcare allowances that mean I can purchase vouchers to help my kids nursery costs tax free are likely to go, I have a 2 year (at least) pay freeze and will have to contribute more in pension contributions. By my reckoning I will be about £5k down a year in 3 years time. Super rich will have the same hit, how is that fair? Plus the chavs won't lose out in the benefit cap, it will be landlords who charge stupid rents because they know the state will pay it, about time they were stopped doing this. You also have to remember their £26k is net of (non existent) tax to them, so really over £40k. They will still get enough to live comfortably at our expense with no big incentive to change their behaviour, that is why benefits should be fixed, no extra for extra kids on the state and no inflation based or RPI based increases, no one else is getting pay increases so why should they? I worked for 6 years for the DHSS and it used to sicken me to see them, supported by CAB and their like, finding every loophole possible to claim a few quid more when genuinely poor pensioners without a large private pension, who would not dream of asking for more suffer.

    I'm all for cuts to the state, but fair does not mean picking on only those who work to better themselves and provide for their families.

    They should stop child benefit completely, it is deducted from income support and tax and child credits so what is the point of it. That would be fair. As I mentioned before the nothern monkeys employed in the child benefit centre could be redeployed to hound benefit cheats and tax avoiders if all they are worried about is a few thousand more unemployed notherners.
  • praps they should reintroduce the lower band of tax that brown brought in then abolished, then put up what is the basic rate, that way not penalising parents which seems to be the case at the moment

    child benefits and vouchers are claw backs for people who pay tax cos they have kids, they aren't benefits
  • Spot on andy, the 'landlord' often strikes a deal or is related to the tenant and they connive to fiddle the state. It was happneing 25 years ago when I was at the DHSS and can only imagine the extent of it now. One good thing that Labour did do was tighten up on self employment in the building trade, making them pay up front and be on the cards, even though they still only pay 20% or so and can claim back from that, why should they be able to pay so little when everyone else is being shafted, especially as they never declare it all anyway. This goes for taxi drivers, especially in London, I wonder what figure taxi drivers that are declaring? Other than black cabs that may well be forced by in-cab systems to declare? Self employed get off very lightly, I am all for encouraging entrepreneurs, but how much entrepreneurship do you require to sit in a car outside the venue (is it still open) and drive people home. I agree it is not a job I would do, but them, hairdressers, nail technicians etc are the ones that pay little or no tax and the child benefit agency staff could be better employed to chase if they did away with child benefits entirely. The more senior staff and finance people should be tasked with tax avoiders at the top end. We need a few examples to be set like they do in the states. If a few high progile dodgers at the top end were jailed then others would be quicker to yield.
  • Interesting about defence cuts and jobs... leaving aside the moral arguments, much of defence is about US/UK/ Nato staying number 1 and also creating exports / supporting allies (like the middle east) ... so loads of high tech jobs with serious cash coming in ... but this must be for tanks and fighter jets ... not trident missile systems ... which either Europe or the US should pay for not us

    The tories didn't talk much about cuts during the election as shades of 1979 not too popular and now they are mouthing off to keep the IMF happy - lets see what they really come up with in a couple of weeks and whether it has the potential to cut the deficit or go too far and kill too many jobs just as UK PLC gets back on it's feet?

    Back to benefits and there really is a lot of room for a massive re think... £500 per week limit sounds fair but they need to sort out the admin and form filling to halve the cost of delivery and reduce fraud... more high tech / new thinking

    And why are we paying to jail foreigners at £40k per year when they should just be deported?
  • edited October 2010
    We pay so much to jail foreigners because their country will not take them back and agree to them going to jail. Or because they might be shouted at and called names which would obviously infringe their human rights.

    £500 a week sounds fair? To who? To the claimants it would. But why should they receive anything near that a week when they could never earn it? Why are there so many east europeans that have come into the country and have been willing to work yet our unemployed have been allowed to sit on their arses watching jeremy kyle hoping to get on there one day. The reason is that benefits were/are not available to a lot of new EU member state citizens, so they know they have to work and do.
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  • well done the Welsh/Scottish and N Ireland assemblies for telling the UK Government not to chop the huge dosh going to said assemblies. England of course have no voice of their own just huge pockets of dosh which goes to fund everyone else.


    Just a suggestion if Dave Tory boy is reading. As you dont stand a cat in hells chance of every geting MPs in N Ireland, Wales and Scotland why not cut the dosh going there by 99% ? Therefore England (where you will have MPs) is loverly jubberly and maybe the Scottish students will have to start paying fees again and maybe the people in scotland will have to pay when they go to the chemists. I mean if we dont give them a penny we could possibly wipe out the debt and im sure its some sort of justice for Royal Bank of Scotland and HBOS role in the banking f++k up.
  • I can think of a very easy way to stop having to give money to Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales.
  • We can't use all our nukes on them, it won't leave much for france.
  • Wouldn't leave much of an army to get involved in various pointless conflicts either, so savings all round. Although to be fair the university and prescriptions are locally funded so that won't generate enough money for salt of the earth hard working Englanders to gold plate their saveloys I'm afraid.
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