goldfinger
- 09 Jun 2005 12:25
Thought Id start this one going because its rather dead on this board at the moment and I suppose all my usual muckers are either at the Stella tennis event watching Dim Tim (lose again) or at Henly Regatta eating cucumber sandwiches (they wish,...NOT).
Anyway please feel free to just talk to yourself blast away and let it go on any company or subject you wish. Just wish Id thought of this one before.
cheers GF.
TANKER
- 08 Nov 2013 09:07
- 32400 of 81564
maxk . the private sector is not worth working for .
if you do not work for the public sector its BAD luck
tell your children not to put good money in to a pension
as I have said many times a switch my cash to my children no tax
I lose at the racing they are very very lucky .I lose 20k they win 20k
my choice of horse is bad they back winners
the irish have been doing it for 100 years
goldfinger
- 08 Nov 2013 09:09
- 32401 of 81564
Well you Tories voted I D SMITH in.
You now look like you will know whats hitting and facing genuine disabled and sick people in this country.
The mans a menace who doesnt give a toss as long as he and his wife betsy protect her millions.
Facing a £425 million pound write off on Universal Credit aswel through him.
He should be kicked out of government.
And yes Im going to suffer aswel.
2517GEORGE
- 08 Nov 2013 09:13
- 32402 of 81564
TANKER is right, pensions are not good and open to raids by cash strapped governments. ISA's and cash ISA's are the way to go and have been for many years, but discipline is required.
2517
goldfinger
- 08 Nov 2013 09:21
- 32403 of 81564
Iain Duncan Smith's second epiphany: from compassion to brutality
I've seen his benefit sanctions inflict misery on places like Easterhouse, where poverty made him weep a decade ago
Follow Polly Toynbee
The Guardian, Friday 8 November 2013
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/nov/08/duncan-smith-poverty-benefit-sanctions-easterhouse
Fred1new
- 08 Nov 2013 09:25
- 32404 of 81564
For cynic,
I am glad we don't have any secrets.
TANKER
- 08 Nov 2013 09:28
- 32405 of 81564
2517 thank you .
but waiting for a certain poster lets see if he agrees
goldfinger
- 08 Nov 2013 09:29
- 32406 of 81564
Wheres hays ?.
TANKER
- 08 Nov 2013 09:32
- 32407 of 81564
Widows could lose their historic right to a pension under plans to halt the ‘terminal decline’ of final salary schemes.
Private sector bosses currently have to make payments to a retired worker’s surviving spouse, typically worth at least half their full pension.
But that obligation would end under proposals from the Department for Work and Pensions.
the people making the decisions on gold plated pensions sticking the knife in to the private sector workers .
you could not make this up
a dam disgrace
cynic
- 08 Nov 2013 09:35
- 32408 of 81564
out of curiosity, do any of you guys trust pension funds with your money?
i've taken all mine out of their sticky and useless hands and put my pot primarily into bricks and mortar, with any spare cash generated from the rentals to be put into SIPP shares of my choosing
TANKER
- 08 Nov 2013 09:39
- 32409 of 81564
PRIVATE sector workers to pay for immigrants pensions
this is why retirement age to rise to 70 to be announced after the next election
and make it legal for private employers to with hold pensions till they reach the pension age . and save companies money in the hope that they will not live to take the pension .
this government is EVIL
CAMERON is a very dishonest piece of turd
TANKER
- 08 Nov 2013 09:40
- 32410 of 81564
that's good news CYNIC
goldfinger
- 08 Nov 2013 09:41
- 32411 of 81564
TANKER and whos in charge of the Dept For Work And Pensions??.
goldfinger
- 08 Nov 2013 09:42
- 32412 of 81564
Mind having said that he'l blame his Civil Servant aids as per usual.
TANKER
- 08 Nov 2013 09:49
- 32413 of 81564
Flexible defined benefit
The Government proposes to remove restrictions that make it compulsory for defined benefit pensions to increase every year with inflation and provide survivor's rights for members.
This means employers will continue to provide a pension income based on a worker's earnings - such as their final salary, or career average - but that it will not have to provide annual increases on this amount, or continue payments to a spouse once the pension-holder dies.
Employers will still take on the risk of having to provide a retirement income, while the employee will have to bear the risk of protecting themselves from future inflation, and find a way of providing for their partners after they die.
Employers could also be given the option of further limiting their financial liabilities by changing workers' pension ages, to reflect the rising life expectancy in the UK.
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/money/pensions/article-2490272/New-blueprint
TANKER
- 08 Nov 2013 09:55
- 32414 of 81564
in plain English it means push up retirement day and hope they die
and never get a penny .
a government forcing the poor into paying money into a pension which over 60% will never get a penny back they will DIE
NHS will not be their for them in the future immigration as fcuked up the NHS and another 10million to be in the uk in 20 years that's over 70 million who is going to pay their pension.
answer we will bring in another 40million to pay their pensions
goldfinger
- 08 Nov 2013 10:07
- 32415 of 81564
This stinks........ or continue payments to a spouse once the pension-holder dies.
These Tories only look after the very rich, and they arent doing a very good job of that either.
cynic
- 08 Nov 2013 10:10
- 32416 of 81564
it seems to me that pension rules, like trust rules, change about every 5 years, the intent being to benefit solely the exchequer (+ accountants and lawyers)
goldfinger
- 08 Nov 2013 10:15
- 32417 of 81564
Indeed indeed.
TANKER
- 08 Nov 2013 10:17
- 32418 of 81564
HITLER would have been proud of this GOVERNMENT this government are way ahead
of being evil HITLER was not I their league he was a saint .
goldfinger
- 08 Nov 2013 10:17
- 32419 of 81564
Just out on twitter.....
Matthew Bayley @MattBayleySky 4m
All in this together? EXC @Jeremy_Hunt in line for £17m windfall in private equity deal for his education business @MarkKleinmanSky reveals