Ed Davey (LibDems), making the point I made yesterday:

'We rightly expect our Armed Forces to protect British citizens around the world in crises like this. But that includes tax exiles like Isabel Oakeshott & washed-up old footballers who mock ordinary people pay our taxes here [in the UK]. So as we protect them, does the prime minister agree that it’s only right for tax exiles to start paying taxes to fund our Armed Forces just like the rest of us do'!

#LibDems #Iran #politics
h/t The Bear

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@ChrisMayLA6

If they are like the odious Oakshott and many others who have fled to tax free countries like Dubai and Monaco to avoid paying UK tax then I totally agree that they should pay for their expensive rescue. However, I don't think the same should apply to UK citizens who moved abroad to work (like me) and who pay tax in whatever country they moved to. In my case that's Luxembourg.

@Paulos_the_fog

Accepting that it's unlikely that Lxembourg is ever going to be embroiled in a medieval crusade to protect the PetroDollar, would you accept paying additional tax up to the UK rates under similar circumstances?


@ChrisMayLA6

@ReggieHere @ChrisMayLA6

The difference between tax in Luxembourg and in the UK is that the poor, over here, are not taxed very much, if at all, but the well-heeled get a bit caned. When I first started work in Luxembourg on a slightly above average salary, I did calculate what I would have been paying in total deductions in the UK on the same salary in £ sterling and I found that give or take a fiver, my net income after deductions would have been pretty much exactly the same in the UK as it was on my first pay slip here.

I should add that I am not a rich tax exile here, I'm a poverty stricken pensioner! I was working here when I retired and could not afford to move back to the UK!

However, on my combined pensions - a state pension here for 11 years work in Luxembourg and a state pittance in the UK for most of the rest of my career, I pay around £200pa in income tax here with no other deductions whereas in the UK on the same combined pensions, I have calculated that I would be paying just short of £3000pa in income tax! So no, I wouldn't be happy to pay UK tax as I'm already in a position that I don't have enough to live on!

In most people's minds Luxembourg = tax dodger, but the reality is not that at all! Most Brits over here, ended up here as I did, because the work dried up in the UK and they were offered a job over here!

Like every other country in the world, Luxembourg has its upsides and downsides. The other morning I needed to see a GP and was able to book an appt. on the internet for the same afternoon. The downside is that you do have to pay, although it's not very much: a few pence over £6.

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