Straha wrote:Their parents earned the money, paid for the house, and own it. They want to do with it what they damn well please. The inheritance tax says that, for an average house in London, that they don't have that right unless their kids pay almost half of what the average person makes in a year!
I went to work, earned my money, I can do what I please...........except wait, I have to pay income tax, the Medicare levy, etc. This is no different. The beneficiary has every right to receive an asset worth shitloads, but they pay a tax but because they did
nothing themselves to earn it (the idea behind the tax).
Straha wrote:Welcome to SD.Net, if you're going to attack a statement back it up. By your own admission someone inheriting an average house in London from their parents has to pay 8K pounds (fixed it to account for the current tax bracket) on the house alone, to say nothing of any other items left behind (cars, money, stocks, etc.). That's ~20% of the average yearly earnings for a British Tax-payer and more than the average Brit has in disposable cash. That means, for all intents and purposes, the average Londoner cannot afford to inherit a average house from their parents. You have a problem with that logic, prove it otherwise.
Nice goal post shifting. Lets go through this with professor Bobalot.
You said.
Straha wrote:...houses, apartments and other high value items cannot be inherited except by the rich....
Since the average price on a home in England is significantly less than the 325k bracket,
the VAST majority of people will inherit without paying anything, which flatly contradicts what you posted. For fucks sake, I even posted your quote when I called bullshit. You chose to ignore this entirely and argue on another tangent. The
average citizen in the UK will either pay a minuscule amount of inheritance tax or none at all.
In fact 94% of all estates don't have the inheritance tax levied on them at all (Source).
I like the quip that I have back up my statements on SD.Net, Nice touch. I went to the trouble of digging up the figures and pointing out the vast majority of people in the country will not pay any form of inheritance tax
in direct contradiction of your statement, and I'm the guy that needs to back up my statements.
Straha wrote:The argument is simple: In the case of the Inheritance tax goods which have already been taxed once (when they were earned) are being taxed a second time (when they are being given to children or other inheritors), and that second tax is unfair because the goods have already been taxed normally. Further, the tax is a punishment on the person leaving the estate and the inheritors because it prevents the dying parties from executing their will according to their wishes, and forces inheritors to pay out extra money (on money or goods which have already been taxed) because they inherited this money.
The counter argument is equally as simple. The person receiving these assets or income
did not themselves do anything to earn it, which is why it is taxed. I suppose it can be described as a form of gift tax. The secondary objective that several people noted in this thread, is to stop the concentration of wealth over generations.
Straha wrote:that second tax is unfair because the goods have already been taxed normally.
Why? Many taxes are levied repeated times on many things all over the world. For example, Land taxes are levied annually on the same thing (not in the UK, I think the Lib-Dem's want to introduce it).
Straha wrote:A. The house isn't being received at 10% of the cost. The house has already been paid for by the parents in question. If we assume the house hasn't gone up or down in value it means the total amount paid for the house is 110% of the cost and more if it's inherited repeatedly.
The tax is not on the house. It is on the "transaction", a person receives a shitload of money/assets which he/she has done
nothing themselves to earn, which is why people brought in a inheritance tax to tax this unearned income.
Straha wrote:B. You haven't proven jackshit. You've proven that the average British house, outside of London, would not incur the inheritance tax. This means the average house in London does fill up that quota and automatically incurs taxation, effecting a wide range of the population. You've not addressed the average size of an estate in the UK. Find me those figures, and prove it doesn't effect a wide range of people in the U.K. and you may have the beginnings of an argument (considering that over 10% of the UK lives in London, I think that's a dent in it already. )
I haven't proven jack shit? Really? Reread your own statement.
You state yourself that only 10% of people live in London itself. Half the them will pay no or a tiny amount of inheritance tax. The rest of the country have homes that are worth significantly less than the bracket (Homes being important as it is almost always the biggest asset) and therefore the vast majority of whom will not pay
any inheritance tax. I said the "Vast majority of people will not pay inheritance tax" and provided numbers. From these numbers it looks like 90%-95% of people will not pay any form of inheritance tax. The BBC article I linked before states 94%.
Seriously, let's go through this again.
Straha:
"houses, apartments and other high value items
cannot be inherited except by the rich...."
Bobalot:
No, the vast majority will not pay any inheritance tax. {Provides numbers}
Straha: Oh yeah! 90-95% of people will pay no or minuscule amounts of inheritance tax if any of my statements are taken as true!
You haven't proven shit! (Especially that most people don't pay inheritance tax!)
Straha wrote:Further, if you want to argue this tax is fair, answer me this: Why can spouses inherit items tax-free but children can't? If a husband or a wife can inherit a valuable estate that the other earned, why can't their children do that same from their parents?
Other than the fact most family homes,cars,apartments, etc. are jointly purchased, it is because they are partners. It is assumed they worked* together to gain these assets, even if one was the home maker. Where as the kid, didn't do shit to earn these assets.
* In the vast majority of cases, which is why when gold diggers marry really old guys (quite often it seems almost senile), wait for them to die and getting shitloads results in many court battles by family members and controversy in the media.
Straha wrote:You bleeping moron. THE ASSETS ARE EARNED. THAT'S HOW THE PARENT GOT THEM!
Did I ever say otherwise, you illiterate? I never said the parents did not earn these assets. I said the
kids did not do anything to earn them, which is the the transaction when the assets are moved to the children's ownership is taxed.
Straha wrote:First, for inheriting the property and having to pay extra tax on it.
Second, for inheriting a non-liquid asset and having to arrange its sale through third party agents while cover their cost.
I have already addressed the first point. It is the transaction that is taxed, as the asset transfer is treated as
unearned income for the recipient.
As to your second point,
you have to prove there are currently lots of inherited houses that
have to be sold in order to cover the tax burden. I find this pretty hard to believe since,
there is a system to pay inheritance tax by yearly instalments link
Here is an interesting bit from Revenues and Customs Service:
You should pay any Inheritance Tax due within six months of the date of the deceased’s death. However, in some cases, such as when the estate includes a house, you can pay in instalments over ten years.
Basically for illiquid items, you can take your time. Assets such as cash in banks, the tax is levied more or less straight away.
As for homes, if you intend to actually live in/keep the house, you can make yearly payments for 10 years. If you plan to sell it, you have to cough up 10% of the amount in the first 6 months and the rest later. But if you were planning on selling, this point is irrelevant to this discussion, because you would have had to deal with third party costs regardless of a tax.
So going back to your example of some guy getting an 8k bill for a house worth 345k. His actual payment is 800 Pounds for that year for an asset worth 345k.
Back to this painful quote of yours:
Straha wrote:That means, for all intents and purposes, the average Londoner cannot afford to inherit a average house from their parents. You have a problem with that logic, prove it otherwise.
I noticed you narrowed it down to London, I guess the other 43 million people in your country aren't important or something. But I will take the average Londoner.
1. 90-95% of the people in the UK don't pay inheritance tax. 94% according to the BBC. To be conservative, I will assume that's about half of all Londoners instead of 90%. That's being fairly generous.
2. The
average Londoner earns significantly more than the national average. Let's say 35k? It's probably more.
3. The average house (currently inflated) when sold
without the usual inheritance tax minimisation schemes or deductions gives you a tax bill of about 8k.
4. You can pay it over 10 years, which is 800 per year. 0.8k/35k = 2.2%
90%+ people in the U.K don't pay inheritance tax. For those who do, if they own a currently overpriced London home the
average Londoner will face a negligible tax burden. It will hardly
force them to sell the house.
Straha wrote:And that's just on houses or cars and their like, to say nothing of other things.
Other things rarely add up to much when compared to homes and cars. You haven't taken into account the various methods of minimising inheritance tax and the various deductions to the inheritance tax.
On a different tangent, the reason why the average home price in London is above the bracket is because of a gigantic housing bubble that is only really starting to deflate. If the threshold kept up with the real increases in home values, most people wouldn't be anywhere near the threshold. Then again, the housing bubble is bursting, and house prices have a long way to fall, so the situation will probably solve itself.
BTW. "Bleeping"? Seriously, as if we don't know what you meant. Grow a pair and just say it.