
A lot of people refuse to see their own privilege, it’s the same with the 60% tax thing. If your kids are at private school and you’re finding yourself having to deal with this tax quirk, you’re a mile away from “the squeezed middle”.
My point wasn’t directly about schools - it was about levying additional taxes on “the rich” in the firm belief that they can and will just pay them because “they’re rich”Jobbo wrote: Sun Oct 01, 2023 10:13 am It is the corollary of what you’re saying though. If you want to run an alternative to the state school system, why is it fair to get a tax break? A private school is just a business.
It’s not additional taxes on the rich, it’s creating a level playing field for businesses. The market sets the price paid by parents.dinny_g wrote: Sun Oct 01, 2023 11:12 amMy point wasn’t directly about schools - it was about levying additional taxes on “the rich” in the firm belief that they can and will just pay them because “they’re rich”Jobbo wrote: Sun Oct 01, 2023 10:13 am It is the corollary of what you’re saying though. If you want to run an alternative to the state school system, why is it fair to get a tax break? A private school is just a business.
I’ve seen your posts on PH and laughed at the responses. Lack of self-awareness.ZedLeg wrote: Sun Oct 01, 2023 10:52 am I’ve been enjoying this argument on PH tbh
A lot of people refuse to see their own privilege, it’s the same with the 60% tax thing. If your kids are at private school and you’re finding yourself having to deal with this tax quirk, you’re a mile away from “the squeezed middle”.
the 60% bit is only from £100-125k though where it just wipes out your personal allowance. So even though it's daft, it doesn't affect the earnings after that - they're back to being 40% again. You always take home more by earning more.Jobbo wrote: Sun Oct 01, 2023 12:46 pmI’ve seen your posts on PH and laughed at the responses. Lack of self-awareness.ZedLeg wrote: Sun Oct 01, 2023 10:52 am I’ve been enjoying this argument on PH tbh
A lot of people refuse to see their own privilege, it’s the same with the 60% tax thing. If your kids are at private school and you’re finding yourself having to deal with this tax quirk, you’re a mile away from “the squeezed middle”.
The thing is, if you are taxed at 60% there’s reduced incentive to earn more. I have effectively been self-employed for a few years and I deliberately limit how much I pay myself to avoid paying what I consider an unfair tax rate. No ‘woe is me’ here, but if the rate remained consistent then I’d pay myself more and thus pay more tax, benefiting the country as a whole. So it’s a bit short-sighted to say it’s simply rich people complaining.
Yes, you take home 40% more of your total earnings. I think that is a bad deal and choose not to take it. If the tax rate was 99% you’d also take home more by earning more but nobody would bother earning more; they’d have more time off or whatever. The rate does go to 45% afterwards anyway, not simply back to a straight 40%, but that’s still more than half of what you earn going to you not the government.Rich B wrote: Sun Oct 01, 2023 4:01 pmthe 60% bit is only from £100-125k though where it just wipes out your personal allowance. So even though it's daft, it doesn't affect the earnings after that - they're back to being 40% again. You always take home more by earning more.Jobbo wrote: Sun Oct 01, 2023 12:46 pmI’ve seen your posts on PH and laughed at the responses. Lack of self-awareness.ZedLeg wrote: Sun Oct 01, 2023 10:52 am I’ve been enjoying this argument on PH tbh
A lot of people refuse to see their own privilege, it’s the same with the 60% tax thing. If your kids are at private school and you’re finding yourself having to deal with this tax quirk, you’re a mile away from “the squeezed middle”.
The thing is, if you are taxed at 60% there’s reduced incentive to earn more. I have effectively been self-employed for a few years and I deliberately limit how much I pay myself to avoid paying what I consider an unfair tax rate. No ‘woe is me’ here, but if the rate remained consistent then I’d pay myself more and thus pay more tax, benefiting the country as a whole. So it’s a bit short-sighted to say it’s simply rich people complaining.
yep, nice if you can choose not to go PAYE and be more efficient with your earnings. I don't have the choice so I'll happily earn as much as I can - half of something is still good, even though I know how wealthy I make the tax man.Jobbo wrote: Sun Oct 01, 2023 7:36 pmYes, you take home 40% more of your total earnings. I think that is a bad deal and choose not to take it. If the tax rate was 99% you’d also take home more by earning more but nobody would bother earning more; they’d have more time off or whatever. The rate does go to 45% afterwards anyway, not simply back to a straight 40%, but that’s still more than half of what you earn going to you not the government.Rich B wrote: Sun Oct 01, 2023 4:01 pmthe 60% bit is only from £100-125k though where it just wipes out your personal allowance. So even though it's daft, it doesn't affect the earnings after that - they're back to being 40% again. You always take home more by earning more.Jobbo wrote: Sun Oct 01, 2023 12:46 pm
I’ve seen your posts on PH and laughed at the responses. Lack of self-awareness.
The thing is, if you are taxed at 60% there’s reduced incentive to earn more. I have effectively been self-employed for a few years and I deliberately limit how much I pay myself to avoid paying what I consider an unfair tax rate. No ‘woe is me’ here, but if the rate remained consistent then I’d pay myself more and thus pay more tax, benefiting the country as a whole. So it’s a bit short-sighted to say it’s simply rich people complaining.
There are other marginal rates which are far worse than 60%, where you earn just enough to lose child benefit for instance. The tax system is over-complicated and by creating these sort of situations it almost certainly raises less money than it could by disincentivising people from earning more.
There’s a big part of the picture missing if you group all private schools into the same category. Parents sending kids to £9-15k pa schools are generally in a completely different wealth category to those with £25k+ pa fees.Jobbo wrote: Sat Sep 30, 2023 11:59 pmFree market economics does not mean favouring particular business sectors. That’s not a left wing view; I’d say it’s a right wing view. It’s not as if Rich is suggesting banning private schools.dinny_g wrote: Sat Sep 30, 2023 4:29 pmNot saying you’re Left Rich but this is the fallacy of the left.Rich B wrote: Sat Sep 30, 2023 1:52 pm If the extra 20% costs you £25k extra a year, then you're not going to get a huge amount of sympathy as you can happily afford the other £100k.
Just because you can afford £100k for schooling, doesn’t mean you can easily afford another £25.
The belief that “the rich”
a. have endless supplies of money that can be taxed
b. wont make decisions (by choice or by necessity) that will reduce or eliminate the tax increase
All the kids in private school in England make up 0.5% of all kids between 6 and 19. The entire private school population would be covered by the average absentee rate in state schools.Jimexpl wrote: Sun Oct 01, 2023 8:55 pm
Does the state system have capacity for an extra 5% feed in from the private sector let alone 30%?
I’d happily send my kids to state school, but in our postcode you won’t get into a decent one unless you can see it from your living room window.
are you sure?ZedLeg wrote: Mon Oct 02, 2023 8:03 amAll the kids in private school in England make up 0.5% of all kids between 6 and 19. The entire private school population would be covered by the average absentee rate in state schools.Jimexpl wrote: Sun Oct 01, 2023 8:55 pm
Does the state system have capacity for an extra 5% feed in from the private sector let alone 30%?
I’d happily send my kids to state school, but in our postcode you won’t get into a decent one unless you can see it from your living room window.
How does that relate to your 0.5% figure?ZedLeg wrote: Mon Oct 02, 2023 8:53 am Just googled numbers but it's apparently around 600k in private schools and 12mil people at around school age. State school absence rate is around 6.5%.
Yeah that's not going to work is it - you can't oversell places like seats on a plane. Our local primary is fully subscribed and they've gone from 1 form entry, to 1.5 form entry in the last few years. They've just this summer finsihed another extension to go to 2 form entry and are still fully subscribed. Kids are sitting in school corridors it's that rammed. They certainly won't have room for (conservatively speaking) even a quarter of the kids from the local prep where my son goes.ZedLeg wrote: Mon Oct 02, 2023 8:03 amAll the kids in private school in England make up 0.5% of all kids between 6 and 19. The entire private school population would be covered by the average absentee rate in state schools.Jimexpl wrote: Sun Oct 01, 2023 8:55 pm
Does the state system have capacity for an extra 5% feed in from the private sector let alone 30%?
I’d happily send my kids to state school, but in our postcode you won’t get into a decent one unless you can see it from your living room window.
Define luxury services? Should private health care be taxed similarly because the NHS is free (ish)?ZedLeg wrote: Mon Oct 02, 2023 11:16 am What would they take them to court for?
I don't see it as politics of envy tbh (I don't believe in that as a concept personally). As I said earlier, to me private schools are luxury services and should be taxed as such.
VAT hasn't been a just tax on luxury goods since 1940s/50s so the whole premise of your argument is not really relevant here.ZedLeg wrote: Mon Oct 02, 2023 12:17 pm You make a good point Holley and there’s obviously other aspects of this to be discussed.
I’m not even that bothered about this happening if I’m being honest. I just though it was odd how many people don’t see sending their kids to private school over the local secondary is a luxury.