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Dementia Tax

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Midlands Eagle Flag 13 Jun 17 11.02am Send a Private Message to Midlands Eagle Add Midlands Eagle as a friend

Originally posted by npn

The point of tax relief on pensions is surely to encourage people to put money away for a retirement and not then be a burden on the state?

Surely the point of encouraging people to invest in a pension is to make life after retirement more comfortable as everyone is entitled to the state pension on reaching retirement age anyway

 

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jamiemartin721 Flag Reading 13 Jun 17 11.04am

Originally posted by Lyons550


I agree entirely with taxing the f*** out of the contributory factors for ill health; AS LONG AS it's ring fenced solely for the purposes of the Health System...which is where the problem lies...as its not.

But I bet you don't believe in reducing peoples taxes proportionally to the reduction in life expectancy.

The irony here is that you should likely be reducing the taxation on things like smoking, drinking, drugs etc which reduce life expectancy.

Sure, someone with cancer is a burden, but generally for a few years, and the intensity of treatment is sporadic. Similarly, diabetes, cheap to manage and a reduced life expectancy.

Where as old age care, really f**king expensive and intensive continual care provision. Chemo twice a week for five weeks is a damn site cheaper than long term dementia, which can last decades, of costs on a daily basis.

The problem really is all those people eating health, exercising regularly, not drinking, drugging and smoking who live into their 80s and 90s.

Live fast, die younger and leave less of a burden on the tax payer.

 


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jamiemartin721 Flag Reading 13 Jun 17 11.05am

Originally posted by Midlands Eagle

Surely the point of encouraging people to invest in a pension is to make life after retirement more comfortable as everyone is entitled to the state pension on reaching retirement age anyway

I thought it was to obtain investment capital by any means, by which companies could maximise profits whilst risk to the company (by laying off poor investments against their clients capital investments).

 


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hedgehog50 Flag Croydon 13 Jun 17 11.07am

Originally posted by jamiemartin721

But I bet you don't believe in reducing peoples taxes proportionally to the reduction in life expectancy.

The irony here is that you should likely be reducing the taxation on things like smoking, drinking, drugs etc which reduce life expectancy.

Sure, someone with cancer is a burden, but generally for a few years, and the intensity of treatment is sporadic. Similarly, diabetes, cheap to manage and a reduced life expectancy.

Where as old age care, really f**king expensive and intensive continual care provision. Chemo twice a week for five weeks is a damn site cheaper than long term dementia, which can last decades, of costs on a daily basis.

The problem really is all those people eating health, exercising regularly, not drinking, drugging and smoking who live into their 80s and 90s.

Live fast, die younger and leave less of a burden on the tax payer.

With opinions like this, it appears that dementia is affecting the younger generations too.

 


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Lyons550 Flag Shirley 13 Jun 17 11.10am Send a Private Message to Lyons550 Add Lyons550 as a friend

Originally posted by jamiemartin721

But I bet you don't believe in reducing peoples taxes proportionally to the reduction in life expectancy.

The irony here is that you should likely be reducing the taxation on things like smoking, drinking, drugs etc which reduce life expectancy.

Sure, someone with cancer is a burden, but generally for a few years, and the intensity of treatment is sporadic. Similarly, diabetes, cheap to manage and a reduced life expectancy.

Where as old age care, really f**king expensive and intensive continual care provision. Chemo twice a week for five weeks is a damn site cheaper than long term dementia, which can last decades, of costs on a daily basis.

The problem really is all those people eating health, exercising regularly, not drinking, drugging and smoking who live into their 80s and 90s.

Live fast, die younger and leave less of a burden on the tax payer.


I guess it gets reduced in comparison to those that live longer...so that's a bit of a paradox/oxymoron.

What I would say is that those who life debilitating conditions are also more likely to utilise the system more and their treatment cost more than those who simply live a healthy normal (if there is such a thing) life until they pass away.

Also, the life expectancy for someone with Dementia isn't as long as you or others would think...it's around 5yrs on avg.

I work in Social services, I see how much Residential and nursing beds cost..its criminal and EXACTLY why there's a push for preventative care to stop people getting to this stage in the first place.

Swings and roundabouts I guess


Edited by Lyons550 (13 Jun 2017 11.13am)

 


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becky Flag over the moon 13 Jun 17 11.11am Send a Private Message to becky Holmesdale Online Elite Member Add becky as a friend

Originally posted by jamiemartin721

But I bet you don't believe in reducing peoples taxes proportionally to the reduction in life expectancy.

The irony here is that you should likely be reducing the taxation on things like smoking, drinking, drugs etc which reduce life expectancy.

Sure, someone with cancer is a burden, but generally for a few years, and the intensity of treatment is sporadic. Similarly, diabetes, cheap to manage and a reduced life expectancy.

Where as old age care, really f**king expensive and intensive continual care provision. Chemo twice a week for five weeks is a damn site cheaper than long term dementia, which can last decades, of costs on a daily basis.

The problem really is all those people eating health, exercising regularly, not drinking, drugging and smoking who live into their 80s and 90s.

Live fast, die younger and leave less of a burden on the tax payer.

There is also the factor that the younger generation expect to put their elderly parents with any form of dementia/senility/illness into subsidised care rather than look after them at home, as previous generations did - this has been a major factor in the increased cost of elderly care that is sadly overlooked by those complaining about it!

 


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pefwin Flag Where you have to have an English ... 13 Jun 17 11.17am

The problem with NIC or the stamp is most people did not understand what they were paying for. Most thought they were saving stamp for their own retirement when (originally) they were paying for current pensioners on a very short “just in time “window, a couple of weeks I think. Obviously, this money is now just subsumed within the general tax burden.

As such perhaps pensioners should pay NIC or get rid of NIC and add into an adjusted income tax, which would be my preference.

You could remove the triple lock, or means test the basic state pension, or even remove the state pension and replace it with the stakeholder scheme, but contributions would require increasing shifting the burden of pension provision entirely onto the private sector, there would be some form very basic state net for those who did not contribute, but not for those who opted out.

I think it is probably too late to solve this solely by taxing pensioners and probably requires general taxation over the short-term to medium term (60 years); typical of a mixed economy, whilst the falling rate of birth and added longevity stabilise.

You bring in young temporary workers who could contribute to the tax yield from the rest of the EU, but that has been kyboshed mainly due to racism.

Some good news is that demographic trends have shown a slight worsening in longevity which should be encouraged, laws and taxation against smoking, drinking should be relaxed to draw maximum tax return against mortality. Recreational drugs should be legalised and taxed.

The baby boomers have had the best gold-plated pensioners, free education, the best of the NHS, perhaps we should treat them like the under 30s who have loans to pay off for state services. Perhaps the elderly should have a loan account on which they can draw upon (not just for a Dementia Tax but increased income, for example, and offset against all assets. An IFA would perhaps call this an enhanced nationalised equity release scheme. I would envisage that inter-generational responsibility would be a must.

You could always take their house and savings.

For Becky – During employment NIC was taken on standard pension contributions but not salary sacrifice, a loop hole HMRC is ready to close.

 


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Lyons550 Flag Shirley 13 Jun 17 11.18am Send a Private Message to Lyons550 Add Lyons550 as a friend

Originally posted by becky

There is also the factor that the younger generation expect to put their elderly parents with any form of dementia/senility/illness into subsidised care rather than look after them at home, as previous generations did - this has been a major factor in the increased cost of elderly care that is sadly overlooked by those complaining about it!


That's certainly true and our figures show that cultures that retain a strong Family network would rather take the strain of caring for an elderly family member at home then to allow someone else to do so.

Also over the last couple of decades Social Services would have accepted to pay for a person to be admitted to a home with certain conditions that they wouldn't now. This is primarily driven by the cuts that we've seen, but it's also forced the system to look at different ways to support clients, as well as promoting their independence and preventing Deprivation Of liberty in the process.

Edited by Lyons550 (13 Jun 2017 11.20am)

 


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Michaelawt85 Flag Bexley 13 Jun 17 11.26am Send a Private Message to Michaelawt85 Add Michaelawt85 as a friend

Originally posted by europalace


Why do people have to 'buy' housing? Most of continental Europe lives very happily with a far higher quality of life simply renting their homes. In Germany, private rents can't go up by more than 10% in any 3 year period. If you think you're being overcharged you go to the town hall where you give a description and sqm of your apartment/house and they decide if you're being overcharged. If so, the landlord must pay back the difference plus interest. When I lived there, nobody talked about property. Renting also makes for a much more flexible workforce and for the individual, much easy to move city for work. A brilliant system overall.

Long term renter here. You make some very important sensible points. However the conservative government in its manifesto was banging the drum yet again of home ownership. Obvious reasons. If you fall on hard times you cannot claim housing benefit so it doesn't cost them anything. When you get old and possibly need care it's sold to fund it so again they don't have to pay anything or if they do it's massively reduced. And then the whole cycle repeats itself. There is no rent cap , longest tenancy you can get is a year so it's constant worry and uncertainty with it . Nigh on impossible to get a local authority property . Labour were the only party which addressed this issue in their manifesto. My rent for the house I live in is twice the mortgage. But I can't get a mortgage and I can't save the deposit so in effect trapped in this cycle. Quite what happens once I am old with no income and having to move all the time I don't know.

 


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jamiemartin721 Flag Reading 13 Jun 17 11.33am

Originally posted by Lyons550


I guess it gets reduced in comparison to those that live longer...so that's a bit of a paradox/oxymoron.

What I would say is that those who life debilitating conditions are also more likely to utilise the system more and their treatment cost more than those who simply live a healthy normal (if there is such a thing) life until they pass away.

Also, the life expectancy for someone with Dementia isn't as long as you or others would think...it's around 5yrs on avg.

I work in Social services, I see how much Residential and nursing beds cost..its criminal and EXACTLY why there's a push for preventative care to stop people getting to this stage in the first place.

Swings and roundabouts I guess


Edited by Lyons550 (13 Jun 2017 11.13am)


Plenty of people end up in old age care without dementia due to less fatal conditions, such a frailty etc. The point is, that we have accepted the idea of 'taxing people' who live unhealthy life styles without actually thinking of those costs that healthy lifestyles entail.

We encourage the idea of living as 'long as possible' and then financially try to fund that by targeting people who won't.

 


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Midlands Eagle Flag 13 Jun 17 11.33am Send a Private Message to Midlands Eagle Add Midlands Eagle as a friend

Originally posted by becky

There is also the factor that the younger generation expect to put their elderly parents with any form of dementia/senility/illness into subsidised care rather than look after them at home, as previous generations did - this has been a major factor in the increased cost of elderly care that is sadly overlooked by those complaining about it!

You are referring back to a time when most women didn't work so had the time to look after elderly parents.

 

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jamiemartin721 Flag Reading 13 Jun 17 11.36am

Originally posted by hedgehog50

With opinions like this, it appears that dementia is affecting the younger generations too.

Not really, I saw my grandparents live into their later years, suffering dementia and physical frailty, requiring constant care etc. It was a horrible existence, s**ting yourself, having no dignity, being herded around, in a banal and sterile environment where you're more an object than a person.

Its not really worth the effort if you ask me. I'd rather go out a) on my own terms b) whilst I'm still me c) and enjoy the pleasures and vices of life.

A walk around an old peoples home is like an advert for not making the average life expectancy.

 


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