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tax
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Shock?? i nearly had a heart attack!! i think i did shed a tear or two... lol!! i'l be paying more in tax thean i do in rent!! was talking to my mum about it and she is in a higher band than i am obviously, for every �1 she earns the tax man gets 40p!!!!! Just doesnt seem worth it sometimes!! Ho hu never mind everyone is in same boast arent they?! xxx
Well, miss_me, from your sheltered upbringing and your dabble at self-sufficiency at university, you have now found out what most of the rest of us are moaning about!
From your modest salary of �14,000 you will see total deductions of �1715 in Income Tax and �986 in so-called National Insurance (which is just income tax by another name). This total of �2,700 is just a fraction short of 20% of your gross income, meaning you work one day a week to provide funds for the government to squander.
Should you be fortunate enough to be able to save any money from what is left, the pathetic interest your savings will attract will also be taxed at 22%. Almost all of the money that you spend from what remains (apart from some zero-rated items such as food and children�s clothes) will see 14.89% (17.5% of the 117.5% you pay in the shops) of the sum spent going to the exchequer. This is amusingly known as "Value Added Tax" (VAT), whereas it should be known as Price Added Tax because only the price has increased, not the value.
If you spend money on certain other things these attract special additional taxes called �duties� (on top of which, of course, VAT is charged). Insurance policies (5% or 17.5% depending on type), Alcohol (35p per pint of beer, �6 on a bottle of spirit), fuel (about 75% of the money you spend on fuel goes to the exchequer). Don�t forget Council Tax should you ever be lucky enough to own or rent a property - the list is endless.
I once did a calculation of the amount of my income which eventually returned to the exchequer and estimated it to be well in excess of 65%. Soon, we shall simply be given a few pence pocket money each week, with our employers being forced to pay our salaries direct to the government.