FORUMS > The Sin Bin > Housing |
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| Quote: Sal Paradise "Perhaps if you were a company currently paying corporation tax here and considering a move maybe a lower tax rate might - and I say might - encourage you stay here for tax purposes. I am not suggesting for one minute that the likes of Google will relocate here on the back of a corporate tax reduction.'"
Any company who can relocate it's HQ for a lower tax rate will do so and plenty have. Why pay 21% instead of 23% when you can pay 0%?
An interesting one is going to be what happens if Scotland decided on independence. The SNP are saying they will reduce the corporation tax rate to 18% undercutting the rest of the UK rate. It might be more feasible for national UK companies who at the moment can't indulge in the tax avoidance the multinationals like Google can to relocate north of the border.
Should we indulge in a race to the bottom in the event this happened or should we just reform the tax laws so this kind of avoidance is no longer legal?
Quote: Sal Paradise "If a reduction the corporate tax rate increases revenues then society as a whole will benefit - would you not agree?'"
It won't. Companies that can avoid corporation tax will carry on avoiding it. Those that can't avoid it (basically any non-multinational company with its HQ here who can't move) will be paying less tax so revenues will decrease.
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International Board Member | 14970 | No Team Selected |
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| Quote: Sal Paradise "I did not say today's teachers are overpaid - I said teachers in our day were underpaid. Nor did I say the teaching profession was under/over valued by society. What I said was teachers saw the role as a profession and accept the T&C as an occupational hazard. '"
Sorry I thought you meant from the point of view of a regular person rather than specifically from a teachers point of view.
I'd agree that's how teachers saw it in the past, but as you yourself acknowledge, the role and duties of a teacher have changed and become a harder job. I would probably apply similar thoughts to nurses, where the role has evolved massively over time and become a much more demanding job.
Quote: Sal Paradise "I would agree it is harder to be a teacher these days as the behavioural standards in society have dropped and the respect for your elders has subsided.'"
I don't quite know whether behavioural standards have dropped but I'd agree there is less respect and I'd also suggest a more selfish attitude. However, I believe these to be things which can be fairly easily changed if kids are put in the right environment. I see it regularly with the kids I coach. Fortunately I'm in the position where I can concentrate on fewer kids. Around 1:15 instead of 1:30 in schools.
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International Chairman | 14845 | No Team Selected |
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| Quote: DaveO "Any company who can relocate it's HQ for a lower tax rate will do so and plenty have. Why pay 21% instead of 23% when you can pay 0%?
An interesting one is going to be what happens if Scotland decided on independence. The SNP are saying they will reduce the corporation tax rate to 18% undercutting the rest of the UK rate. It might be more feasible for national UK companies who at the moment can't indulge in the tax avoidance the multinationals like Google can to relocate north of the border.
Should we indulge in a race to the bottom in the event this happened or should we just reform the tax laws so this kind of avoidance is no longer legal?
It won't. Companies that can avoid corporation tax will carry on avoiding it. Those that can't avoid it (basically any non-multinational company with its HQ here who can't move) will be paying less tax so revenues will decrease.'"
But as someone said, most companies that make profits here do pay corporation tax.
How do you define a company "that can't move" as this seems central to your idea?
PS Just heard the number one reason why Scotland will vote against independence on The One Show. Apparently the major supermarkets say they will put prices up significantly oin Scotland if it becomes independent. Currently Scottish prices are effectively subsidised by the rest of the UK. If independent Scotland would be treated as 'international' by the supermarkets and so have separate pricing to the rest of the UK. can't see the average Scottish punter voting for that whatever the CT rate!
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| Quote: Dally "
How do you define a company "that can't move" as this seems central to your idea?
'"
Probably the 90% plus of companies who are not global corporations, can't recall the exact stat but when we used to do our marketing we were always told that the sector of employees who employ less than 500 bodies represent 90+% of the total number of businesses.
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International Chairman | 18060 | No Team Selected |
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| Quote: DaveO "Any company who can relocate it's HQ for a lower tax rate will do so and plenty have. Why pay 21% instead of 23% when you can pay 0%?
An interesting one is going to be what happens if Scotland decided on independence. The SNP are saying they will reduce the corporation tax rate to 18% undercutting the rest of the UK rate. It might be more feasible for national UK companies who at the moment can't indulge in the tax avoidance the multinationals like Google can to relocate north of the border.
Should we indulge in a race to the bottom in the event this happened or should we just reform the tax laws so this kind of avoidance is no longer legal?
It won't. Companies that can avoid corporation tax will carry on avoiding it. Those that can't avoid it (basically any non-multinational company with its HQ here who can't move) will be paying less tax so revenues will decrease.'"
Why is every multi national not domiciled in a tax haven then? BP is a multi national corporation every opportunity to relocate where it likes and pay no tax - yet it chooses to domicile here - so your point of why pay 30% when you can pay nothing doesn't ring true?
Your last point doesn't ring true either - lower corporation tax actually increases take, why would that be?
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| Quote: JerryChicken "Probably the 90% plus of companies who are not global corporations, can't recall the exact stat but when we used to do our marketing we were always told that the sector of employees who employ less than 500 bodies represent 90+% of the total number of businesses.'"
Nearly all FTSE 100 companies are global. A big chunk earn a big part of their revenues outside the UK. Why do they stay HQ'd here? What about all the multinationals based in Japan, USA, France, etc?
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| Quote: cod'ead "So parents have no responsibility in developing these "life skills" then?'"
I must say, I don't recall anyone needing to 'teach' me to use a phone.
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| Quote: Dally "Nearly all FTSE 100 companies are global. A big chunk earn a big part of their revenues outside the UK. Why do they stay HQ'd here? What about all the multinationals based in Japan, USA, France, etc?'"
Well thats not the same thing as I'm talking about.
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| Quote: Dally "But as someone said, most companies that make profits here do pay corporation tax.
How do you define a company "that can't move" as this seems central to your idea?'"
Well perhaps that was too much of a generalisation to make a point in that you can still avoid corporation tax and be HQ'd here as well if you have operations abroad. Things like transfer pricing work wherever you are HQ'd. Boots have an operational HQ in Nottingham but the parent company is Swiss. Remember the controversy over Vodafone and its tax deal with HMRC?
In any case it is not just "UK" companies who are avoiding tax. Ikea for example does it, we know Starbucks has done it and so on.
This tax avoidance is a serious problem and while even Amazon pay a small amount of corporation tax the amount they pay is minimised by being incorporated in Ireland.
The idea any of these companies will give up their tax avoidance schemes because we lower our corporation tax rate is as I said naive.
Quote: Dally "PS Just heard the number one reason why Scotland will vote against independence on The One Show. Apparently the major supermarkets say they will put prices up significantly oin Scotland if it becomes independent. Currently Scottish prices are effectively subsidised by the rest of the UK. If independent Scotland would be treated as 'international' by the supermarkets and so have separate pricing to the rest of the UK. can't see the average Scottish punter voting for that whatever the CT rate!'"
I think you underestimate the political skill of Alex Salmond. The "better together" campaign is being painted as negative and while I think Salmond and the SNP are living in cloud cuckoo land with half the stuff they are promising this bad news on supermarket pricing is thrown back as bullying and a way to point out just why they need to be free of such parasites. I have been following the debate on various on-line sites and whenever anything negative comes up if they can't refute it outright the tactic is to try and frame the debate along the lines of "well we might be worse off but at least we will be in charge of our own destiny". This is going to be as much about the heart as the mind and while polls show a minority in favour of independence there are enough undecided voters to swing it and it is these Salmond and the SNP are targeting with their "Braveheart" tactics.
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| Quote: Sal Paradise "Why is every multi national not domiciled in a tax haven then? BP is a multi national corporation every opportunity to relocate where it likes and pay no tax - yet it chooses to domicile here - so your point of why pay 30% when you can pay nothing doesn't ring true?'"
It is ironic you chose BP as an example. They oppose one of the fundamental accounting reforms that would permit the correct level of corporation tax to be paid. Country-by-country reporting.
Why do you think they oppose it? Because corporation tax rate is too high?
No, because being able to post consolidated accounts that hide intra-group trades is a key way of avoiding the tax and they will want to keep doing that [iwhatever the corporation tax rate is[/i .
They will want to avoid country-by-country reporting whatever the corporate tax rate is because while they no doubt pay some corporation tax here they will, like any international company, be using intra-company trades to minimise it.
It's ironic by the way because the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico has led the US government to want to regulate the extraction industry more and one aspect of that was country-by-country reporting so they could tell just what an extraction company operating in the US was earning in the US.
Quote: Sal Paradise "Your last point doesn't ring true either - lower corporation tax actually increases take, why would that be?'"
Only on some right wing fantasy Island. It's like the trickle down effect. Pure fantasy.
The idea lowering the corporation tax rate will reduce avoidance is ridiculous. If tax can be avoided it will be whatever the rate.
If you want to argue that lower taxes increase the tax take as we see mentioned by various right wing politicians and economists from time to time that is a different debate than one specially about corporation tax.
I'd also be interested to know what you think about the possibly of an independent Scotland undercutting the rest of the UK's corporation tax rate. It would be very easy for Whitbread who own Costa who do pay corporation tax here (unlile Starbucks) to move north of the border and deny us their corporation tax for example.
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| Back to the original topic for a moment.
I see Mark Carney has now warned against anyone overstretching themselves on a mortgage. With interest rates at a historic low for so long, he's afraid that many will extend themselves in the hope that house prices will continue rising and when interest rates do rise, there will be sufficient realiseable equity in the property to avoid foreclosure. That is the economics of stupidity, especially given the 'help to buy' scheme. Even without interest rates getting into double digits, a lot of new buyers will struggle with just a 1% increase.
The average price of a house in London is now 16 times the average London wage. That is a completely unsustainable situation.
Instead of building houses that people cannot realistically afford to buy, why aren't we building homes that even the poorest can afford to rent?
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| Quote: Mintball "I must say, I don't recall anyone needing to 'teach' me to use a phone.'"
The midde-classes don't need teaching. Us working class types who were brought up without a 'phone in the house fond it a daunting experience!
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International Chairman | 14845 | No Team Selected |
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| Quote: cod'ead "Back to the original topic for a moment.
I see Mark Carney has now warned against anyone overstretching themselves on a mortgage. With interest rates at a historic low for so long, he's afraid that many will extend themselves in the hope that house prices will continue rising and when interest rates do rise, there will be sufficient realiseable equity in the property to avoid foreclosure. That is the economics of stupidity, especially given the 'help to buy' scheme. Even without interest rates getting into double digits, a lot of new buyers will struggle with just a 1% increase.
'"
He's doing the correct thing by warning people. IMO the government is cynically and irrationally manipulating the housing market as the aspirations of the young to create a "feel good" factor in the hope of gaining a Tory majority in 2015. As soon as the election is out of the way they won't give two hoots for those same people when they are stuck in negative equity or worse.
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International Chairman | 14845 | No Team Selected |
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| Quote: DaveO "Well perhaps that was too much of a generalisation to make a point in that you can still avoid corporation tax and be HQ'd here as well if you have operations abroad. Things like transfer pricing work wherever you are HQ'd. Boots have an operational HQ in Nottingham but the parent company is Swiss. Remember the controversy over Vodafone and its tax deal with HMRC?
'"
Well its then up to HMRC to police the transfer-pricing legislation better. It's also up to legislators to show some urgency in modernising the tax system to cope better with international trade.
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| Quote: Dally "The midde-classes don't need teaching. Us working class types who were brought up without a 'phone in the house fond it a daunting experience!'"
That was me in 1974 when I started work, we didn't get a phone in the house until 1979.
On the other hand I also had to be taught in the office how to use an electric calculator (note "electric" rather than "electronic", it was an electro-mechanical calculator) as calculators were banned at our grammar school, we had to do all multiplications on paper or in our heads
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