After Starbucks, etc comes.....
#1
Posted 10 November 2012 - 05:01 PM
Stem-who? Ask Margaret Hodge about her family company! See http://blogs.channel...-for-hodge/1915
Should go down well when yet another hypocritical Champagne Socialist has a go at Starbucks over transfer pricing and corporation tax.
#2
Posted 10 November 2012 - 05:15 PM
Its the rules that need changing.
Push away the thief trying to steal your gift, the fighter is the one whose feet are swift.
#3
Posted 12 November 2012 - 11:49 AM
Judging by the queue stretching out of Starbucks in Leeds today (one of several) its not an issue that bothers UK customers.
Yep, not bothered by tax dodging or the lousy coffee they make.
"Perhaps it would be better that future criticism of sports be made on the narrow basis of what is being discussed, without reference to other sports, unless those sports offer a solution to the problem in hand." - Brian 'Pigface' Moore
"What happens in rugby union? A player takes the ball, moves forward a little and gets tackled. A whole load of players then roll about on the ground. Pheep! The referee gives a penalty." - Simon Barnes
#4
Posted 12 November 2012 - 12:00 PM
Ask them would they stop going to starbucks or amazon, etc and they wouldn't. We are often outraged but rarely actually act upon it.
#5
Posted 12 November 2012 - 12:21 PM
Up until 2000 most of the homebuyers in the UK received MIRAS, would these be the same "most people" who now think tax avoidance schemes are wrong?
Tax evasion is quite a different matter but don't lose sight of the fact that all these corporations and individuals are doing is taking advantage of the law as it stands. If there was a massive loophole that effectively said "anyone supporting Accrington Stanley can claim 100% of their earnings as tax-free then the membership for their supporters club would suddenly be close to the working population of the UK, the fault would not lie with the people taking advantage of the loophole, or for that matter Accrington Stanley FC, but with the government that allowed a loophole that massive and that ridiculous to exist. Probably Thatcher's fault. That or the RFL / RFU.
#6
Posted 12 November 2012 - 12:55 PM
I'll go with RFU.Actively avoiding Tax is neither wrong nor unfair, we all do it and the Tax structure in this country is there to allow people and corporations to do just that.
Up until 2000 most of the homebuyers in the UK received MIRAS, would these be the same "most people" who now think tax avoidance schemes are wrong?
Tax evasion is quite a different matter but don't lose sight of the fact that all these corporations and individuals are doing is taking advantage of the law as it stands. If there was a massive loophole that effectively said "anyone supporting Accrington Stanley can claim 100% of their earnings as tax-free then the membership for their supporters club would suddenly be close to the working population of the UK, the fault would not lie with the people taking advantage of the loophole, or for that matter Accrington Stanley FC, but with the government that allowed a loophole that massive and that ridiculous to exist. Probably Thatcher's fault. That or the RFL / RFU.
#7
Posted 12 November 2012 - 12:59 PM
I see your point but, at the time, MIRAS was something that existed to encourage people to buy their own homes.Actively avoiding Tax is neither wrong nor unfair, we all do it and the Tax structure in this country is there to allow people and corporations to do just that.
Up until 2000 most of the homebuyers in the UK received MIRAS, would these be the same "most people" who now think tax avoidance schemes are wrong?
Tax evasion is quite a different matter but don't lose sight of the fact that all these corporations and individuals are doing is taking advantage of the law as it stands. If there was a massive loophole that effectively said "anyone supporting Accrington Stanley can claim 100% of their earnings as tax-free then the membership for their supporters club would suddenly be close to the working population of the UK, the fault would not lie with the people taking advantage of the loophole, or for that matter Accrington Stanley FC, but with the government that allowed a loophole that massive and that ridiculous to exist. Probably Thatcher's fault. That or the RFL / RFU.
Although a lot of large corporations are not breaking the law as it stands, they are breaking "the spirit of the law" by having taxation specialists fine-tooth combing the regulations for loopholes that are basically the holes left in the laws by not correctly wording the law.
The loopholes are not put in to reward companies who's tax advisors are clever enough to spot them.
#8
Posted 12 November 2012 - 01:04 PM
You CAN blame Thatcher for that, flogging them off to the French and Germans simply to satisfy an ideology without a single thought for the consequences.
Visit the Derby City website and see the progress being made!
#9
Posted 12 November 2012 - 01:09 PM
these corporations and individuals are doing is taking advantage of the law as it stands.
UK Uncut started with Vodafone - who had broken the law but were let off by their chums at the HMRC.
- Severus, July 2012
#10
Posted 12 November 2012 - 01:59 PM
#11
Posted 12 November 2012 - 02:07 PM
and the hypocrite Hodge?
The company says it pays an effective tax rate of 30%.
I have no idea if this makes Hodge a hypocrite or not.
But it if makes you feel any better I promise not to do any of my steel trading through Stemcor.
- Severus, July 2012
#12
Posted 12 November 2012 - 02:09 PM
and the hypocrite Hodge?
I think you've answered your own question John.
#13
Posted 13 November 2012 - 02:49 PM
Lets be honest, when asked a direct question of 'is actively avoiding tax wrong or unfair' and most people would say yes.
Ask them would they stop going to starbucks or amazon, etc and they wouldn't. We are often outraged but rarely actually act upon it.
Although I think I heard something on the radio about a boycott being organised against organisations who dodge tax. The authorities could do with publishing a league table before that gets off the ground.
For my part, I will never make a purchase from Starbucks again.
#14
Posted 13 November 2012 - 06:00 PM
For my part, I will never make a purchase from Starbucks again.
Good position to take, aside from the tax issues I'd been thinking for a while now this year I'd be going local/independent instead of taking the lazy/easy option of using Amazon.
Photographs;
Wigan v St Helens
Huddersfield v Wigan
Wigan v Warrington
Older Rugby Matches
Football Photos
Futsal Photos
My website
#15
Posted 13 November 2012 - 06:43 PM
I didn't realise Amazon sold CoffeeGood position to take, aside from the tax issues I'd been thinking for a while now this year I'd be going local/independent instead of taking the lazy/easy option of using Amazon.
#16
Posted 13 November 2012 - 07:08 PM
Photographs;
Wigan v St Helens
Huddersfield v Wigan
Wigan v Warrington
Older Rugby Matches
Football Photos
Futsal Photos
My website
#17
Posted 13 November 2012 - 07:10 PM
#18
Posted 13 November 2012 - 07:20 PM
Sorry!Drat.
Outsmarted.
Photographs;
Wigan v St Helens
Huddersfield v Wigan
Wigan v Warrington
Older Rugby Matches
Football Photos
Futsal Photos
My website
#19
Posted 13 November 2012 - 09:55 PM
Although I think I heard something on the radio about a boycott being organised against organisations who dodge tax. The authorities could do with publishing a league table before that gets off the ground.
For my part, I will never make a purchase from Starbucks again.
I made the exact same vow after they poisoned me a few years ago.
#20
Posted 14 November 2012 - 10:42 AM
"Perhaps it would be better that future criticism of sports be made on the narrow basis of what is being discussed, without reference to other sports, unless those sports offer a solution to the problem in hand." - Brian 'Pigface' Moore
"What happens in rugby union? A player takes the ball, moves forward a little and gets tackled. A whole load of players then roll about on the ground. Pheep! The referee gives a penalty." - Simon Barnes
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