Author Topic: Income Tax system in chaos?  (Read 1002 times)

Online Dickled

Reading this.....

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I wonder how much worse things are going to get as a result of interest rates for savers increasing so dramatically, meaning, I imagine, that many will now find themselves liable to income tax if their income from savings is above £1000?
« Last Edit: November 19, 2023, 07:25:48 am by Dickled »

Offline Adoniron

I think there are more fundamental problems with the income tax system than taxation of savings interest over £1000. It needs wholesale reform and simplification.

Online Dickled

I think there are more fundamental problems with the income tax system than taxation of savings interest over £1000. It needs wholesale reform and simplification.
Yes, you're right.
I guess I was just being a bit egocentric.  :)

Online RandomGuy99

Reading this.....

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I wonder how much worse things are going to get as a result of interest rates for savers increasing so dramatically, meaning, I imagine, that many will now find themselves liable to income tax if their income from savings is above £1000?
Yes, I got a letter from HMRC saying I'd under paid tax due to interest payments. They're adjusting my tax code to recover it over a year.

Offline Blackpool Rock

I think there are more fundamental problems with the income tax system than taxation of savings interest over £1000. It needs wholesale reform and simplification.
Yes HMRC have been unfit for purpose for at least 15 years, I had dealings with them (painful to say the least) about business expenses around 15 years ago.
My company ended up sending me to an external accountant who did work for us, I went in with all my P60's and letters etc, he read everything and then said that he knew HMRC was a total mess but i've not seen incompetence on this scale before.

I'd get a letter telling me I owed them £500 then 2 days later another saying it was £150, a few days later apparently they owed me £50 then they settled down and claimed I owed them sums between £5 and £10 but couldn't seem to actually work it out  :dash:

How much did it cost for a bunch of fuckwits to process and chase / send out letters for a bit of chump change which was fundamentally wrong as I didn't actually owe them a penny.
In the meantime they seem to leave the larger multinational tax dodgers like Vodafone; Starbucks and Amazon alone  :diablo:

I believe quite a few years ago a decision was made to cut staff numbers in a bid to save money, what wasn't factored in was that employing less staff meant they couldn't chase and claw back as much money or at least they couldn't chase the big numbers just go after the small guys for a few quid
So often these decisions on "cost saving measures" end up costing far more than they save  :thumbsdown: