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lol taxes, my favourite subject, so what is the rate of say the equivalent income tax, capital gains tax, inheritance tax, VAT over there?? Everything seems to be so expensive over here. |
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Sandy, people were taking responsability for their financial situations, by saving with a respected, well established company which was very popular with hundreds of thousands of people over at least 2 generations. How on earth would they have any idea that this company was going to go into administration? It is all very well to say from Holland that you don't understand people using this type of scheme, when obviously from your posts things are far less expensive over there and there is less financial constraints on people in the way they shop. You may not have thought you have personally attacked anyone on here but when you are scathing in regard to peoples choices and some of those people are members of Catsey, then of course they are going to take it as a personal attack! |
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Income tax and pension/health deductions are staggering here, th British EU workers who come here are appalled at what they have to pay. It's hard to do a comparison, since we have a lump deduction for both tax and contributions to a scala of other funds for benefits. Give me a while to work out an example, do the currency conversions and I'll get back to you. Mind you, we do get twice the old age pension you get in the UK. it's enough to live on, just, and there are no social security top-ups. |
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"How on earth would they have any idea that this company was going to go into administration?" Any company can go bankrupt, we have seen it time and time again. People need a bit more financial savvy, that's all. Companies never, ever, warn anyone when they are in trouble. |
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I think it is a shame what has happened with Farepak as I believe there are a few other companies who do a similar business and have done for a long long time. They will lose out and so in the long run will it's members. I remember about 12 years ago when money was very tight for me and my OH, living in a rented flat with only my income which I think was about £600 per month and our rent alone was £280 let alone council tax of £89 per month, that we decided to join Sainsburys Christmas saver club, we paid in by direct debit about £20 a month to save for our christmas presents for family and a little bit of food. It was a great idea and we tried to forget about the savings and not touch them if we had an emergency, we were just very luckily there was only two of us and we don't/didn't have any children. I do feel for the farepak members because I have been in the situation were you go to the cashpoint and can only draw out £20 to pay for a weeks worth of shopping. Luckily for us it was when we were young and things have changed a lot since. |
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Emma, I've been there! When I lived in London, I was so poor it wasn't true, paying half my salary for one lousy bedsit. I brought up a child alone for the last 2 years of my studies and was managing on considerably less than a single mother on social security gets - and half of the amount was a state loan which I paid back over 10 years! I had kitties for Christmas, clothes, holidays, spent hours budgetting. Ah, the bad old days, eh? |
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