Posts Tagged ‘Inheritance’

Planning

Monday, August 15th, 2011


The outcome of the family is expected, but it may have helped them face some difficult facts. “Denial is common and a lot of people don’t want to examine their situation,” as explained. “So they don’t look at it. They then spend a lot of years staying in a really bad relationship. The couple didn’t do that. They split up and got on with their lives.”

The couple declined to speak to us for this article, but when we checked in with the woman a year ago, she felt that the makeover had helped open her eyes to problems that had been there all along. “I feel that I actually have more money now as a single mom because I’m in control,” she said. “I’m not paying my husband’s debts anymore. And once the divorce is complete, I’ll be in a better position to put the rest of the adviser’s money tips from the makeover into action. It’s all going to work out fine for me.”

If you’re hoping to succeed with your own financial plan, you should be aware that you won’t always be in control. You’ll eventually run into events that you could have never seen coming. They could be detrimental, such as divorce or an illness, or they could be helpful, such as an inheritance or a healthy new relationship. Either way, you’ve got to take life as it comes, re-evaluate your priorities when you hit an unexpected detour and set new goals. The key is to always feel like you’re heading in the right direction.

 

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Lifestyle vs. Reality

Wednesday, October 14th, 2009


The boomer generation is tremendously optimistic about the future and their retirement years. However, are they prepared? As it turns out, not really.

A Forrester Research study in the US found that three in 10 boomers between 51 – 61 haven’t started any financial planning for retirement. In US, Strategic Guidance found that only 15% of its citizens felt fully prepared financially.

There is a new reality for boomers going into retirement.

Two thirds of boomers will be carrying debt into retirement rather than paying it off beforehand.

Instead of savings, real estate accounts for a great deal of boomer household wealth. This may lead to insufficient cash balances from which to draw on for retirement income.

Almost 45% believe they’ll be helping their children financially for the next seven to 10 years.

More than half of those surveyed don’t expect an inheritance. Their parents are living longer – and depleting the assets.

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Economic Capital – Tax Havens their Roles : Perceptions , Viewpoints and Basics of International Taxation and Finance

Saturday, March 7th, 2009


Tax Havens – Good or Bad

Leave them alone – they are ok and good – a fact of  life

We are all stronger for supporting the wealth and wealthy -  do you we tax the strong ?  Or is it theft away from “everyone else “  and if we tax these dodgers they will just go somewhere else or move to to another jurisdiction entirely ?
Here is a proper and full discussion of the relative merits of the questions , queries involved and relative viewpoints :

We no longer need to say, as we once did, that tax havens (or secrecy jurisdictions as we prefer to call them) are a problem: we have proven that to be true. Day by day more and more people are convinced that action needs to be taken against tax havens. Gordon Brown has now been added to the list of Barack Obama, Angela Merkel and Nicholas Sarkozy.

But almost hourly people call me and ask “what can be done?” It is a reasonable question: some tax havens like Switzerland and Luxembourg are sovereign states. All have the right to pass legislation. It is that right that lets them deliberately undermine the regulation (whether with regard to tax, financial regulation, inheritance, trade or more besides) of other states, which is the sole characteristic that they all share in common. What this question boils down to is ethical speculation on our right to apparently interfere with the sovereignty of another jurisdiction.

So let me deal straight away with the ethics of tackling tax havens. This is important: the tax havens won on this issue the last time they were attacked, principally by the OECD from 1998 onwards. This happened because of the way in which the OECD defined the problem. They said a tax haven was a place with:

a) No or only nominal taxes

b) Lack of effective exchange of information

c) Lack of transparency

d) No substantial activities

In a sense they were right, except this described the symptoms of the problem, not the problem itself. As such the focus was on changing the behavior of the haven itself, not on mitigating its effect in the states demanding change. This was bound to fail, and fail it has because in the intervening ten years we have learned that the havens have no intention of changing their behavior, and we have only limited power to make them do so (except in the case of the incredibly important UK dependencies – where direct action is possible). In that case this was the wrong definition producing the wrong policy outcomes, however laudable the OECD’s objectives.

If instead of focusing on the tax issue (which is important, but not key) and instead we focus on the secrecy issue (which is the core problem, whether it be tax, financial or other regulation that is being abused) then we must define a secrecy jurisdiction and not a tax haven.

I define a secrecy jurisdiction as a place that intentionally creates regulation for the primary benefit and use of those not resident in their geographical domain that is designed to undermine the legislation or regulation of another jurisdiction and which, in addition, creates a deliberate, legally backed veil of secrecy that ensures that those from outside the jurisdiction making use of its regulation cannot be identified to be doing so.

This then makes it  clear that the actions of the secrecy jurisdiction provide us with the ethical answer that we need to justify action against them. They have chosen to attack the sovereignty of other places to promote their own economic well-being. Those responding to that attack with economic sanctions are doing so as an act of self defense to preserve their sovereignty. They are not attacking the sovereignty of another place. As such sanctions can be ethically justified.

This is the basis on which the attack on tax havens / secrecy jurisdictions must be built. We can win from this launch platform.

I’ll deal with the appropriate sanctions later.

Tax Research UK » Tax havens: is it ethical to outlaw them – We no longer need to say, as we once did, that tax havens (or secrecy jurisdictions as we prefer to call them) are a problem: we have proven that to be true. Day by day more and more people are convinced that action needs to be taken …

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