It's not an attack on anybody. Your explanation of the role of the advocate professional advisor was not just about Jim Stafford, but was relevant for the entire profession of advocate professional advisors.I presume that isn't an attack on me?
In any case, perhaps you might please clarify it, as Jim Stafford is not a tax specialist and I've never heard of him making public comments in relation to tax rates.
You can make the same argument that it is "unfair" for "ordinary" people to want to keep their family home if they can't afford the repayments. Especially as any concessions such as split mortgages, or extensions of cheap trackers will come at the expense of shareholders and taxpayers.
I don't think it's "unfair" to try to get the best possible deal for your client, whether that is MABS acting for someone with a €100k mortgage or Jim Stafford arguing for someone with a €1m mortgage.
It's not an attack on anybody. Your explanation of the role of the advocate professional advisor was not just about Jim Stafford, but was relevant for the entire profession of advocate professional advisors.
which is just another way of saying... "Whether a debtor gets to retain his family home is wholly dependent on the creditors. The same rules apply to trophy houses as they do to one bedroom apartments."
I can't see too many banks agreeing that a debtor needs a trophy house befitting their professional status if it involves large debt write downs.
In practice, banks rarely require people to leave their family home, whether it is a €100k home or a €1m home.
Most borrowers living in trophy homes will have other assets and liabilties which dwarf the value of the family home and the debt associated with it. The lenders will do an overall deal which leaves the borrower in the family home. In some cases, instead of writing off debt, they will transfer the shortfall on another mortgage to the family home.
..... I do think that people living in trophy homes should have to downsize in order to make their debt more sustainable. After all why should the plebs subsidise the trophy home. There is no sustainable argument for it. Yes the people involved may lose a bit of face. So what.
I know a local GP doctor, good professional, living in a private 5 bed home. The cost of selling it and trading down to a four bed semi in a housing estate would realise such little profit that when that and the associated costs of sale, auctioneer, solicitor, engineer etc were all calculated it made more sense to stay put. Only later did she realise that a lot of her business was around the fact that people knew where she lived, would ring at the weekend or show up at her door.
No-one chooses their doctor based on the ... location of their house.
Remember Jim clarified that by professional he meant "high income".Certainly untrue for my neck of the woods.
Should I be worried that I don't know this vital (?) information on where they live?
Jim was not suggesting that a solicitor needed to live in a trophy home and not pay for it.
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