Are there potential problems?
Consider a millionaire who currently rents a large house, owns no home, and pays tax on all his income. Under this proposed scheme he'd be better off buying a house and continuing to rent.. given that he would receive 100% tax relief on his mortgage, both capital and interest,, and so his new house would cost him nothing... as the tax payer is paying for it. He would increase his mortgage payments so that they exactly balance out his rent, and thus he can squeeze the taxpayer for every last cent.
(sorry, not sure if that is correct, but he does benefit, ... to at least the tune of his mortgage payments multiplied by his tax rate.)
Yes, things can be dated etc, .. but this loophole will remain, as will others for all schemes of this type. And the tax payer will end up supporting some genuine cases, but a lot of money will go to rich people who qualify themselves for a scheme.
There seems to be a blurring of taxation and social welfare here.
Yes CSIRL, good point. So people should start preparing now...
But it does incentivise people to move out of PPRs, and into rented accomadation. Some people would move from PPR house 12, to next door, rented house no 13., and avoid paying tax that way.
So people moving one house to avoid paying tax on the 8,000 is possible, especially if 'wink wink' house swap arrangements, with agreed tax favourable rents, aren't ruled out explicitily.
I think all these proposals are too far removed from the problem, and too complex. If they're attempted then the cynic in me will think that of course the elite are setting up a nice new tax break for themselves.
Help should be through social welfare, .. if that means a special 200 million fund is set up and people can apply that's fine. Or should it be 1,000 million, or whatever?
The proposed scheme is to facilitate labour force mobility, not necessarily for people in difficulties (though people may get into difficulties in the future if they cannot move with their employment).
Hi joeOh, so that's a different scheme entirely.
Anyone who wants to move can apply?, and you don't need to be in difficulty?, but you do need to be in negative equity?
The scheme can be abused, and will be abused. People living next door to one another can house swap, and avoid tax. How will this be legislated against? Simplistic proposals to solve this will not work, and will leave loopholes.
I disagree.
It doesn't make sense to introduce a scheme which leaves people worse off. If the scheme allows people to move somewhere new for a new job then it also seems to allow next door neighbours to house swap to get the same benefits.
If there are no benefits for one then there's none for the other either, and the scheme is pointless.
If one benefits, as you'd expect from a scheme explicitily set up to benefit people, then I haven't seen any way to exclude the next door house swap thing. Some simplistic proposals may seem to make sense but on reflection, these don't solve the problem, they only move it.
The fact that it's complicated to work out who benefits and to what degree indicates that the proposal is too far removed from the real problem that we're aiming to solve. I've lost track of what the original problem was... I think it was to help people who cannot get work near their house, and so they want to move to get work, and not lose out by moving.
The arguments being put forward against this proposal are truly bewildering. "The rich will find a loophole and exploit it"
"Peolple will swap homes with their neighbours and dodge tax"
Are you for real JB?
What are these loopholes that you envisage? Can you not see that your Neighbour-Neighbour swap scam would be totally pointless? There would be absolutely zero benefit to either neighbour.
If you disagree, please explain.
I never mentioned this so please stop trying to muddy the argument. No CGT breaks, nice and simple only rent received as long as it's under the existing payments and they have one PPR and no other property. You keep trying to bring in some kind of extra problems which would help the rich in some way.The CGT issue is real, but it doesn't help struggling homeowners to incur CGT liabilities either, even if they are deferred into the future. So I had assumed that CGT would not be payable on homes vacated under this scheme.
In any event, in the absence of a house price databse the CGT issue will be problematic.. who will decide what the house was worth when vacated?, as it is this value which is relevant to CGT.
So pretty unworkable from that point of view.
If you honestly believe this Joe, I give up.You'll have to explain why the neighbour - neighbour thing is pointless. After all, I am implicitily assuming that the scheme is set up to benefit people, not disadvantage them.
You ask me for extar info, and yet you provide absolutely none yourself,.. you simply dictate your view that it's pointless.
It's not pointless, unless the scheme is pointless for everybody, in which case the entire scheme is pointless.
The benefit to each neighbour is not paying tax on 8,000, as per Brendans example.
Please outline your reasons as to why this neighbour-neighbour thing cannot work. It absolutely works under the scheme as decribed so far.
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