Brendan Burgess
Founder
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Babyboomer suggested in the main thread on the principles that there should be an equivalent to the UK Individual Savings Account in Ireland.
In summary, this is how UK ISAs work.
1) You can save up to £20,000 a year in an ISA.
2) The income and capital gains are tax-free
3) You don't need to complete a tax-return
I love the administrative simplicity of this, but £20k a year seems very high. After 10 years, someone could have £200k in a fund which is tax-free.
Another problem is that this is so attractive, people would save through this rather than a pension fund.
Brendan
In summary, this is how UK ISAs work.
1) You can save up to £20,000 a year in an ISA.
2) The income and capital gains are tax-free
3) You don't need to complete a tax-return
I love the administrative simplicity of this, but £20k a year seems very high. After 10 years, someone could have £200k in a fund which is tax-free.
Another problem is that this is so attractive, people would save through this rather than a pension fund.
Brendan
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