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Programming Forum and web based access to our favorite programming groups.On 4 Oct, 16:08, Howard Brazee <how...@brazee.net> wrote: > On Thu, 4 Oct 2007 08:04:23 -0500, "HeyBub" <heybubNOS...@gmail.com> > wrote: > > > > So only people who are employed by others should pay taxes? > > > > What is the amount that divides "too much" from "not too much"? What > criteria are you using? (I'd use the responses from the businesses - > if they leave the country or otherwise find ways to avoid paying the > taxes, then they are too much). > > Why not? All taxes "punish" people for having money that can be > taken from them. > > two > > To get money. So? Maybe it's too much work to audit foreigners > working abroad. =20 > > I remember an Arthur C. Clarke? story about the first people on the > moon. It was an international expedition, and some people needed to > stay behind (it was going to be a permanent thing - who would > anticipate going to the moon then abandoning it for half a century?). > Everybody figured that those returning first would be showered with > fame and money. The Brits volunteered to stay - to end up with over > half of their year outside of the UK - for tax reasons. Just in case no-one else has mentioned it: the tax situation is not that simple in the UK. To avoid tax on earnings in one year one must be outside of the UK for in excess of one year. That means as much as 18 months to avoid tax on 6 months earnings. However, as a foreign national resident in the UK, earning oodles of dosh overseas, it is possible to reduce one's UK tax burden to the min imum by agreeing with the IR a nominal tax payment (=A325k?).
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