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Mapletree Croydon 05 Oct 15 3.24pm | |
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Quote jamiemartin721 at 05 Oct 2015 2.30pm
Quote dannyh at 05 Oct 2015 1.52pm
Quote Hoof Hearted at 05 Oct 2015 10.05am
Quote jamiemartin721 at 05 Oct 2015 9.49am
Quote Mapletree at 05 Oct 2015 9.33am
Protected, cossetted group sitting fat and happy on final salary pension schemes that they didn't pay nearly enough for and massive housing equity growth. In the very pleasant position of being able to dole out their largesse to the coming generation as they see fit, maintaining control over them. And they can avoid inheritance tax if they do that too. I see no reason they should get special treatment either way but I would err on the side of redistribution of wealth rather than giving them free bus journeys and fuel benefits without means testing. I actually fail to see why they are exempt from National Insurance payments (even when they are still working), they take so much out of the system it's hard to understand why they should consider that they have 'already paid their dues'. The politic of envy.
I agree with others who quite rightly call for a review of pensioner benefits to be means tested. I will not be a pensioner for another 6 years by then I expect fee bus passes to have gone, but I wouldn't have applied for one anyway as I can transport myself. Exactly Hoof, when and where did this sense of entitlement come from ? "i worked in Mcdonalds for 40 years therefore i deserve to live in a castle when I die is the latest battle cry of the great unwashed No you bloody don't. You provide for your own future, why should the Current crop of working tax payers pay for your living allowances ? Means testing is the only way to do it.
I think if you've worked for 40 years, and paid tax and national insurance you're entitled to a state pension, access to old age care etc because that's what you paid in for. I don't think you deserve a castle or anything special, but the way the current situation is developing, we have a generation growing up that actual seem overly entitled to demand that others receive nothing. Everyone is entitled to the basics. If I paid in NIC I've actually bought my state pension, but then successive governments seem to be hell bent on making sure they meet as few responsibilities to society as possible, and farming as much of it out to private enterprise as possible to milk. Also a lot of people are still working as pensioners to make ends meet now days, which kind of suggests that something is going a bit wrong. Realistically, I think you should be able to live out your last few years when you retire. I'd like to see means testing not as a method for making sure pensioners and people over the state age of retirement aren't s**ting themselves about the cost of buying food or putting on the heating.
At what point have you really 'bought' your State pension and how long should it last you. Fair enough, if you retire at 60 maybe your State pension should cease when you are 80?
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leggedstruggle Croydon 05 Oct 15 3.35pm | |
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Quote jamiemartin721 at 05 Oct 2015 3.18pm
Quote leggedstruggle at 05 Oct 2015 3.13pm
Quote jamiemartin721 at 05 Oct 2015 2.35pm
Quote leggedstruggle at 05 Oct 2015 2.28pm
Quote jamiemartin721 at 05 Oct 2015 1.31pm
Quote Mapletree at 05 Oct 2015 1.19pm
Quote jamiemartin721 at 05 Oct 2015 1.07pm
Quote Lyons550 at 05 Oct 2015 11.47am
Why are we paying pensions so early in life anyway? Under the Pension reform in 1908 a pension of 5 shillings (£0.25p) was given to those over 70 whose annual means do not exceed £31.50. Now bearing in mind that the average age at the turn of the 19th century was 47 for men and 50 for women; if we were to apply the same principles to todays avg ages of 79 for men and 83 for women, we wouldn't expect to see a pension until 102-103!
I suspect it had something to do with 'not wanting to upset a core demographic of voters - i.e. the upper working class and middle classes' during the 80s and 90s, who are now approaching their pension age. After all these were the housing boom's biggest benefactors - We seem, as a nation to have been very keen on keeping them very happy, even if it means generations of people unable to afford a home. But it does seem a bit unfair that they're now singled out as a 'disposable vote', so that they Conservatives can presumably make more appeal to the Upper working class and middle classes (note that New Labour did nothing either - its not a tory slate). Its an odd thing that anyone earning over 30k a year should be able to claim any kind of welfare benefit 'by default', in the same way that maybe someone can earn a '960,000' bonus for just doing their job. The bigger issue now is the lack of housing stock in London. The Government must have determined this is a bigger voter issue than keeping this group happy. Maybe they should also put in place better equity release schemes so that the surplus value in housing can be used towards a comfortable retirement. Seems fair, you keep your house but in the end you don't pass on all the value, given you have excess value that is holding back the economy by not being realisable. Not just London. The South East. We have the same problems with affordable housing and rent as London in most areas that are vaguely feasible to commute from. Even places further afield such as Winchester (and f**king Basingstoke) property and rental prices are eye wateringly high to the point of 'wtf'. And if you think London is bad, try the really nice areas out side of London that are commutable. My parents bought an ex-council house in 1983, on an estate, for 35k, that now you'd be bitting the sellers hand off for a 400k. As it stands, you have to sell property to contribute towards care housing, if you have it (and the cost of that care is extortionately high, like 600-800 per week). Although I think there was legislation to end that. For a lot of people I suspect their only real hope of having somewhere decent to live, and own, is via inheritance, or a phenomenal career. Thanks goodness for mass-immigration though eh? Would be so much worse without the untold benefits of it. Edited by leggedstruggle (05 Oct 2015 2.28pm) In terms of pension and NIC we very well might have been. Of course its also kept a lot of people with second homes and rental property in a very comfortable position. Of course those people are driving up housing prices and rents, that has prevented the housing crisis from being resolved 'naturally' by capitalism (ie crashing) and them having to flood the market with property they can no longer afford. A lot of people in the UK benefit greatly by renting out to migrants, who otherwise would likely have been saddled with massive negative equity had the market crashed in the 'crunch'. I'm not defending that mind, or working migrants. Its just that a lot of British people directly profited from a 'demand boom' that wasn't driven by natural UK economics. I see, the answer to the housing crisis then is to try to get more immigration so that there are even more people requiring housing? No, I've always been against economic migration especially the EU right to work. But the outcome of ending that, is going to be a potential crash of the housing market (which is probably necessary and should have happened a long time ago). It would have some negative aspects on 'UK Home Owners esp Landlords'. But I think it really needs to happen, and has been effectively offset for eight years or more, by the demand of EU and working migrants. I agree that the market will eventually have some form of crash - will not cry much over landlords affected though. Key to this and a number of other major problems is to leave the EU.
mother-in-law is an anagram of woman hitler |
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Stuk Top half 05 Oct 15 3.35pm | |
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Quote Mapletree at 05 Oct 2015 3.24pm
Quote jamiemartin721 at 05 Oct 2015 2.30pm
Quote dannyh at 05 Oct 2015 1.52pm
Quote Hoof Hearted at 05 Oct 2015 10.05am
Quote jamiemartin721 at 05 Oct 2015 9.49am
Quote Mapletree at 05 Oct 2015 9.33am
Protected, cossetted group sitting fat and happy on final salary pension schemes that they didn't pay nearly enough for and massive housing equity growth. In the very pleasant position of being able to dole out their largesse to the coming generation as they see fit, maintaining control over them. And they can avoid inheritance tax if they do that too. I see no reason they should get special treatment either way but I would err on the side of redistribution of wealth rather than giving them free bus journeys and fuel benefits without means testing. I actually fail to see why they are exempt from National Insurance payments (even when they are still working), they take so much out of the system it's hard to understand why they should consider that they have 'already paid their dues'. The politic of envy.
I agree with others who quite rightly call for a review of pensioner benefits to be means tested. I will not be a pensioner for another 6 years by then I expect fee bus passes to have gone, but I wouldn't have applied for one anyway as I can transport myself. Exactly Hoof, when and where did this sense of entitlement come from ? "i worked in Mcdonalds for 40 years therefore i deserve to live in a castle when I die is the latest battle cry of the great unwashed No you bloody don't. You provide for your own future, why should the Current crop of working tax payers pay for your living allowances ? Means testing is the only way to do it.
I think if you've worked for 40 years, and paid tax and national insurance you're entitled to a state pension, access to old age care etc because that's what you paid in for. I don't think you deserve a castle or anything special, but the way the current situation is developing, we have a generation growing up that actual seem overly entitled to demand that others receive nothing. Everyone is entitled to the basics. If I paid in NIC I've actually bought my state pension, but then successive governments seem to be hell bent on making sure they meet as few responsibilities to society as possible, and farming as much of it out to private enterprise as possible to milk. Also a lot of people are still working as pensioners to make ends meet now days, which kind of suggests that something is going a bit wrong. Realistically, I think you should be able to live out your last few years when you retire. I'd like to see means testing not as a method for making sure pensioners and people over the state age of retirement aren't s**ting themselves about the cost of buying food or putting on the heating.
At what point have you really 'bought' your State pension and how long should it last you. Fair enough, if you retire at 60 maybe your State pension should cease when you are 80?
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jamiemartin721 Reading 05 Oct 15 3.37pm | |
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Quote Mapletree at 05 Oct 2015 3.24pm
This is the point Jamie. Your 'last few years' are now likely to be when you are past 100. Shouldn't you have to work until you are genuinely less able? I see so many people that retired before they were 60, let alone 65. You really think they paid enough to cover them for the next 40 years? Their contributions in 40 years of work were enough to cover their next 40 years? At what point have you really 'bought' your State pension and how long should it last you. Fair enough, if you retire at 60 maybe your State pension should cease when you are 80? No one in my family has ever got over the 100 mark. 93 is the record, on both sides, and in fairness that looked really sh*t for the last five years or so. In the last generation of my family, so far no one's gotten over the 80 mark, 74 being the closest. Problem is I don't think you can really have a situation where you suddenly no longer get a state pension at 80, what do you do with the people who now have no income. Sure you can point to 'private pensions' but lets be honest, they really f**ked a lot of people badly, and got to skate on the responsibility. So I'd say maybe raise taxes accordingly, and we'll have to swallow it as a society, that we'd rather pay a few percent more tax than put old people out in the street.
"One Nation Under God, has turned into One Nation Under the Influence of One Drug" |
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susmik PLYMOUTH -But Made in Old Coulsdon... 05 Oct 15 7.37pm | |
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Quote Mapletree at 05 Oct 2015 3.24pm
Quote jamiemartin721 at 05 Oct 2015 2.30pm
Quote dannyh at 05 Oct 2015 1.52pm
Quote Hoof Hearted at 05 Oct 2015 10.05am
Quote jamiemartin721 at 05 Oct 2015 9.49am
Quote Mapletree at 05 Oct 2015 9.33am
Protected, cossetted group sitting fat and happy on final salary pension schemes that they didn't pay nearly enough for and massive housing equity growth. In the very pleasant position of being able to dole out their largesse to the coming generation as they see fit, maintaining control over them. And they can avoid inheritance tax if they do that too. I see no reason they should get special treatment either way but I would err on the side of redistribution of wealth rather than giving them free bus journeys and fuel benefits without means testing. I actually fail to see why they are exempt from National Insurance payments (even when they are still working), they take so much out of the system it's hard to understand why they should consider that they have 'already paid their dues'. The politic of envy.
I agree with others who quite rightly call for a review of pensioner benefits to be means tested. I will not be a pensioner for another 6 years by then I expect fee bus passes to have gone, but I wouldn't have applied for one anyway as I can transport myself. Exactly Hoof, when and where did this sense of entitlement come from ? "i worked in Mcdonalds for 40 years therefore i deserve to live in a castle when I die is the latest battle cry of the great unwashed No you bloody don't. You provide for your own future, why should the Current crop of working tax payers pay for your living allowances ? Means testing is the only way to do it.
I think if you've worked for 40 years, and paid tax and national insurance you're entitled to a state pension, access to old age care etc because that's what you paid in for. I don't think you deserve a castle or anything special, but the way the current situation is developing, we have a generation growing up that actual seem overly entitled to demand that others receive nothing. Everyone is entitled to the basics. If I paid in NIC I've actually bought my state pension, but then successive governments seem to be hell bent on making sure they meet as few responsibilities to society as possible, and farming as much of it out to private enterprise as possible to milk. Also a lot of people are still working as pensioners to make ends meet now days, which kind of suggests that something is going a bit wrong. Realistically, I think you should be able to live out your last few years when you retire. I'd like to see means testing not as a method for making sure pensioners and people over the state age of retirement aren't s**ting themselves about the cost of buying food or putting on the heating.
At what point have you really 'bought' your State pension and how long should it last you. Fair enough, if you retire at 60 maybe your State pension should cease when you are 80?
Supported Palace for over 69 years since the age of 7 and have seen all the ups and downs and will probably see many more ups and downs before I go up to the big football club in the sky. |
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Mapletree Croydon 05 Oct 15 8.18pm | |
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Great, I like to entertain Clearly it's not viable and whoosh on you for thinking I meant it. My point is, however, that you should only take out what you put in, otherwise you are stealing from the next generation. If you choose to start taking your pension early when you are still able to work then you should get less. In theory things do work that way but in practice we have a generation that lucked out and - if this site is anything to go by - doesn't care. It seems I am not the only one that thinks this is a selfish approach. This from today's Evening Standard: The contract with the generation below used to be something along the lines of: hang on in there and in a quarter of a century you will be us. You’ll have the jobs, the houses, the savings. You’ll have the security and the faint, comfortable dullness of middle age: your world will be our world. In fact, for very many years over the past couple of centuries, that promise was a bare minimum: your world, we could say with confidence, will be better than ours. You will be freer, more prosperous, more mobile, healthier and better housed. That contract has been broken; and its breaking is of unimaginable importance. But you don’t hear that much about it, because under-30s are barely represented in the national conversation. They are not, yet, MPs, and they don’t set the agenda in the media. Inasmuch as they are glimpsed, it’s through the prism of their parents’ anxieties: “boomerang children” refusing to leave the nest, “politically disengaged” moochers incessantly sexting each-other, “generation rent”. What do we say to them now? “Sorry” might be a start. In a quarter of a century we will need to admit to our children: you will not be us. We have pulled that ladder up. We have spent all the money and left our bar tab for you to pay off. You will have little or no prospect of owning a home. Your chances of being secure in a job are slim. And on top of the no-home, no-security, no-money thing, the chances are that even before you finish education you will be very sad, or very anxious, or very afraid.
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Mapletree Croydon 05 Oct 15 8.19pm | |
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Quote jamiemartin721 at 05 Oct 2015 3.37pm
Quote Mapletree at 05 Oct 2015 3.24pm
This is the point Jamie. Your 'last few years' are now likely to be when you are past 100. Shouldn't you have to work until you are genuinely less able? I see so many people that retired before they were 60, let alone 65. You really think they paid enough to cover them for the next 40 years? Their contributions in 40 years of work were enough to cover their next 40 years? At what point have you really 'bought' your State pension and how long should it last you. Fair enough, if you retire at 60 maybe your State pension should cease when you are 80? No one in my family has ever got over the 100 mark. 93 is the record, on both sides, and in fairness that looked really sh*t for the last five years or so. In the last generation of my family, so far no one's gotten over the 80 mark, 74 being the closest. Problem is I don't think you can really have a situation where you suddenly no longer get a state pension at 80, what do you do with the people who now have no income. Sure you can point to 'private pensions' but lets be honest, they really f**ked a lot of people badly, and got to skate on the responsibility. So I'd say maybe raise taxes accordingly, and we'll have to swallow it as a society, that we'd rather pay a few percent more tax than put old people out in the street.
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aquickgame2 Beni = summer,Caribbean = winter 06 Oct 15 5.56am | |
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Quote Mapletree at 05 Oct 2015 8.18pm
Great, I like to entertain Clearly it's not viable and whoosh on you for thinking I meant it. My point is, however, that you should only take out what you put in, otherwise you are stealing from the next generation. If you choose to start taking your pension early when you are still able to work then you should get less. In theory things do work that way but in practice we have a generation that lucked out and - if this site is anything to go by - doesn't care. It seems I am not the only one that thinks this is a selfish approach. This from today's Evening Standard: The contract with the generation below used to be something along the lines of: hang on in there and in a quarter of a century you will be us. You’ll have the jobs, the houses, the savings. You’ll have the security and the faint, comfortable dullness of middle age: your world will be our world. In fact, for very many years over the past couple of centuries, that promise was a bare minimum: your world, we could say with confidence, will be better than ours. You will be freer, more prosperous, more mobile, healthier and better housed. That contract has been broken; and its breaking is of unimaginable importance. But you don’t hear that much about it, because under-30s are barely represented in the national conversation. They are not, yet, MPs, and they don’t set the agenda in the media. Inasmuch as they are glimpsed, it’s through the prism of their parents’ anxieties: “boomerang children” refusing to leave the nest, “politically disengaged” moochers incessantly sexting each-other, “generation rent”. What do we say to them now? “Sorry” might be a start. In a quarter of a century we will need to admit to our children: you will not be us. We have pulled that ladder up. We have spent all the money and left our bar tab for you to pay off. You will have little or no prospect of owning a home. Your chances of being secure in a job are slim. And on top of the no-home, no-security, no-money thing, the chances are that even before you finish education you will be very sad, or very anxious, or very afraid.
From what I understand the earliest you can get it is 65 going up to 66,then up another year or so if you were born after a certain date. If you mean a private pension.then that is what you have paid in yourself,which has nothing to do with what the government pays out.
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Percy of Peckham Eton Mess 06 Oct 15 6.07am | |
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Quote leggedstruggle at 05 Oct 2015 8.59am
Alan Sugar gets the winter fuel allowance - is that a sensible use of tax-payers' money? He pays tax so why is that a problem?
Denial is not just a river in Egypt! |
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leggedstruggle Croydon 06 Oct 15 8.12am | |
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Quote Percy of Peckham at 06 Oct 2015 6.07am
Quote leggedstruggle at 05 Oct 2015 8.59am
Alan Sugar gets the winter fuel allowance - is that a sensible use of tax-payers' money? He pays tax so why is that a problem? I didn't expect Sugar to be on a Palace forum - been banned from Spurs? Also, Alan, do you think that other tax-payer, the Queen, is worth her £40 million a year of 'being-royal-allowance'. (By the way a 22% increase this year - we are all in this together.) Edited by leggedstruggle (06 Oct 2015 8.32am)
mother-in-law is an anagram of woman hitler |
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Mapletree Croydon 06 Oct 15 9.05am | |
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Quote aquickgame2 at 06 Oct 2015 5.56am
Quote Mapletree at 05 Oct 2015 8.18pm
Great, I like to entertain Clearly it's not viable and whoosh on you for thinking I meant it. My point is, however, that you should only take out what you put in, otherwise you are stealing from the next generation. If you choose to start taking your pension early when you are still able to work then you should get less. In theory things do work that way but in practice we have a generation that lucked out and - if this site is anything to go by - doesn't care. It seems I am not the only one that thinks this is a selfish approach. This from today's Evening Standard: The contract with the generation below used to be something along the lines of: hang on in there and in a quarter of a century you will be us. You’ll have the jobs, the houses, the savings. You’ll have the security and the faint, comfortable dullness of middle age: your world will be our world. In fact, for very many years over the past couple of centuries, that promise was a bare minimum: your world, we could say with confidence, will be better than ours. You will be freer, more prosperous, more mobile, healthier and better housed. That contract has been broken; and its breaking is of unimaginable importance. But you don’t hear that much about it, because under-30s are barely represented in the national conversation. They are not, yet, MPs, and they don’t set the agenda in the media. Inasmuch as they are glimpsed, it’s through the prism of their parents’ anxieties: “boomerang children” refusing to leave the nest, “politically disengaged” moochers incessantly sexting each-other, “generation rent”. What do we say to them now? “Sorry” might be a start. In a quarter of a century we will need to admit to our children: you will not be us. We have pulled that ladder up. We have spent all the money and left our bar tab for you to pay off. You will have little or no prospect of owning a home. Your chances of being secure in a job are slim. And on top of the no-home, no-security, no-money thing, the chances are that even before you finish education you will be very sad, or very anxious, or very afraid.
From what I understand the earliest you can get it is 65 going up to 66,then up another year or so if you were born after a certain date. If you mean a private pension.then that is what you have paid in yourself,which has nothing to do with what the government pays out.
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jamiemartin721 Reading 06 Oct 15 10.16am | |
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Quote Mapletree at 05 Oct 2015 8.19pm
Quote jamiemartin721 at 05 Oct 2015 3.37pm
Quote Mapletree at 05 Oct 2015 3.24pm
This is the point Jamie. Your 'last few years' are now likely to be when you are past 100. Shouldn't you have to work until you are genuinely less able? I see so many people that retired before they were 60, let alone 65. You really think they paid enough to cover them for the next 40 years? Their contributions in 40 years of work were enough to cover their next 40 years? At what point have you really 'bought' your State pension and how long should it last you. Fair enough, if you retire at 60 maybe your State pension should cease when you are 80? No one in my family has ever got over the 100 mark. 93 is the record, on both sides, and in fairness that looked really sh*t for the last five years or so. In the last generation of my family, so far no one's gotten over the 80 mark, 74 being the closest. Problem is I don't think you can really have a situation where you suddenly no longer get a state pension at 80, what do you do with the people who now have no income. Sure you can point to 'private pensions' but lets be honest, they really f**ked a lot of people badly, and got to skate on the responsibility. So I'd say maybe raise taxes accordingly, and we'll have to swallow it as a society, that we'd rather pay a few percent more tax than put old people out in the street.
Only on a statistical determination of the whole population. When you look at it in Individual terms, no one in my fathers and mothers generation has made it further than 74, and that 5 out of 8 have died as a result of cancer (almost certainly 6 out of 8 by the end of next year), developed in their 50-60s, the chances of me surpassing 100 are very slim. Genetically I've been dealt a pair of fives. Its not the worse hand, but its not one that you'd go all in on. Even worse, 4 of the 8 died of cancers that were resistant to radiation and chemotherapy. The only real hope is a 'wild card' (ie massive break through in cancer treatments), if I'm going to make 100
"One Nation Under God, has turned into One Nation Under the Influence of One Drug" |
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