ChatterBank4 mins ago
Child Benefit "trap"
I always had a feeling this was going to catch some people out.
https:/ /www.da ilymail .co.uk/ money/n ews/art icle-61 82141/H ard-wor king-fa milies- hounded -pay-th ousands -fallin g-foul- child-b enefit- rules.h tml
The new rules introduced in 2012 were very clear so I don't have a great deal of sympathy with those that have been caught out...but my question isn't about the so-called trap.
My question is....
Can anybody please explain to me the rationale behind the scenario that a couple both earning £49,999 are entitled to the full benefit whereas a couple where only one person works but earns £60,000 is not entitled to anything? To rub salt into the wound, the person earning £60k is paying tax so the couple earning £40k more than him or her can receive child benefit.
This just strikes me as completely bananas.
https:/
The new rules introduced in 2012 were very clear so I don't have a great deal of sympathy with those that have been caught out...but my question isn't about the so-called trap.
My question is....
Can anybody please explain to me the rationale behind the scenario that a couple both earning £49,999 are entitled to the full benefit whereas a couple where only one person works but earns £60,000 is not entitled to anything? To rub salt into the wound, the person earning £60k is paying tax so the couple earning £40k more than him or her can receive child benefit.
This just strikes me as completely bananas.
Answers
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No best answer has yet been selected by Deskdiary. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Families with children shouldn't pay less tax nor should they get benefits for adding to the overpopulated country/world. People should earn enough to live on and have kids (2 max preferably) if they wish. It's isn't a subject for tax nor benefit and the issue goes away if a dose of sanity is applied.
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I'm not sure any couple which has a joint income of £60000 needs child benefit, but there is a debate to be had about whether child benefit should be universal/non-means tested at all or whether it should be stopped altogether for children born after a set future date. I wouldn't be surprised if the admin that was involved in adminestering this cap cancelled out a fair chunk of the savings.
"Every parent gets it below the thresholds mentioned before. We're not all feckless."
Indeed not, jo, but I don't think that's what YMB was suggesting. All peas are green but not everything that's green is a pea. So, adopting the analogy, all feckless parents get CB but not everybody that gets CB is a feckless parent.
But he makes a very valid point. The country is (for various reasons) hugely over populated and an ever increasing population is unsustainable. The country needs to develop a model that does not depend on ever increasing numbers and ceasing payments to people simply on the basis that they have children would be part of that model.
Indeed not, jo, but I don't think that's what YMB was suggesting. All peas are green but not everything that's green is a pea. So, adopting the analogy, all feckless parents get CB but not everybody that gets CB is a feckless parent.
But he makes a very valid point. The country is (for various reasons) hugely over populated and an ever increasing population is unsustainable. The country needs to develop a model that does not depend on ever increasing numbers and ceasing payments to people simply on the basis that they have children would be part of that model.
-- answer removed --
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