|
|
|
|
|
|
Source: (consider it)
|
Thread: Uncle Pete, Castro, Trump & Brexit have nothing on this
|
Sioni Sais
Shipmate
# 5713
|
Posted
The UK government for underpaying tax credits to tens of thousand of disabled people. This is all because one department (the Department of Work and Pensions) did not share information with another (HMRC, which handles tax matters).
You would have thought that now that the error has been discovered the government would reimburse those who have lost thousands of pounds but no, they are paying the arrears for this year alone and hiding behind the usual "You should have checked it" mantra, which given the difficulty of finding the algorithm for calculating tax credits is horseshit.
I hope the officials* concerned get hauled up in front of a parliamentary committee and given the roasting of their lives.
*Not ministers. This is standard operational practice and the civil servants need to be made uncomfortable here.
-------------------- "He isn't Doctor Who, he's The Doctor"
(Paul Sinha, BBC)
Posts: 24276 | From: Newport, Wales | Registered: Apr 2004
| IP: Logged
|
|
Evangeline
Shipmate
# 7002
|
Posted
Grrr, I do hope that those who have been overpaid in either welfare or those who have underpaid their taxes get the same ability to tell the government "you should have checked".
Posts: 2871 | From: "A capsule of modernity afloat in a wild sea" | Registered: May 2004
| IP: Logged
|
|
Teekeey Misha
Shipmate
# 18604
|
Posted
quote: Originally posted by Sioni Sais: *Not ministers. This is standard operational practice and the civil servants need to be made uncomfortable here.
Surely, if it is "standard operational practice" then it is administrative policy? Officials are not responsible for policy:
quote: Originally uttered by Sir Humphrey Appleby: I do see that there is a real dilemma here. In that, while it has been government policy to regard policy as a responsibility of Ministers and administration as a responsibility of Officials, the questions of administrative policy can cause confusion between the policy of administration and the administration of policy, especially when responsibility for the administration of the policy of administration conflicts, or overlaps with, responsibility for the policy of the administration of policy.
-------------------- Misha Don't assume I don't care; sometimes I just can't be bothered to put you right.
Posts: 296 | From: UK | Registered: Jun 2016
| IP: Logged
|
|
Callan
Shipmate
# 525
|
Posted
Given that the government is short of readies, perhaps they could work out who is responsible and take the discrepancy out of their wages. Starting with the Secretary of State and working down.
-------------------- How easy it would be to live in England, if only one did not love her. - G.K. Chesterton
Posts: 9757 | From: Citizen of the World | Registered: Jun 2001
| IP: Logged
|
|
L'organist
Shipmate
# 17338
|
Posted
The tax system of the UK is a disgrace.
The thousands of exemptions and caveats within the tax legislation is impenetrable to all but specialists.
The complexity of the system leaves it more open to fraud than something simpler. And the fact that it can be altered without warning twice a year leaves thousands at the mercy of an army of bureaucrats who all too often don't understand the rules they're meant to be applying.
Above all else, the official culture of the administering body - HMRC - is one where every citizen is viewed as being automatically devious, untruthful and in the wrong. Any government of whatever hue which thinks that HMRC is in any way, shape or form "fit-for-purpose" should be ashamed of itself.
-------------------- Rara temporum felicitate ubi sentire quae velis et quae sentias dicere licet
Posts: 4950 | From: somewhere in England... | Registered: Sep 2012
| IP: Logged
|
|
Sioni Sais
Shipmate
# 5713
|
Posted
quote: Originally posted by Teekeey Misha: quote: Originally posted by Sioni Sais: *Not ministers. This is standard operational practice and the civil servants need to be made uncomfortable here.
Surely, if it is "standard operational practice" then it is administrative policy? Officials are not responsible for policy:
Only ministers can impose change. Officials don't, often for good reason, but there is no good reason here, just historic meanness.
-------------------- "He isn't Doctor Who, he's The Doctor"
(Paul Sinha, BBC)
Posts: 24276 | From: Newport, Wales | Registered: Apr 2004
| IP: Logged
|
|
Jolly Jape
Shipmate
# 3296
|
Posted
I'm only a consumer here, but I think to lump all govt departments together does a gross injustice to, particularly those who used to be the Inland Revenue, and the DWP band what used to be customs and excise. Of course, IR and C & E have been long merged, but in staffing and culture terms they are still very different beasts. In my dealings with tax officials, I have always found them courteous, respectful and fair
-------------------- To those who have never seen the flow and ebb of God's grace in their lives, it means nothing. To those who have seen it, even fleetingly, even only once - it is life itself. (Adeodatus)
Posts: 3011 | From: A village of gardens | Registered: Sep 2002
| IP: Logged
|
|
Marvin the Martian
Interplanetary
# 4360
|
Posted
quote: Originally posted by Callan: Given that the government is short of readies, perhaps they could work out who is responsible and take the discrepancy out of their wages.
It's a nice idea, but Gordon Brown isn't on the payroll any more.
-------------------- Hail Gallaxhar
Posts: 30100 | From: Adrift on a sea of surreality | Registered: Apr 2003
| IP: Logged
|
|
Callan
Shipmate
# 525
|
Posted
quote: Originally posted by Marvin the Martian: quote: Originally posted by Callan: Given that the government is short of readies, perhaps they could work out who is responsible and take the discrepancy out of their wages.
It's a nice idea, but Gordon Brown isn't on the payroll any more.
Gordon Brown wasn't responsible for government policy between 2011-2014, unless I'm about to wake up and find Bobby Ewing in the shower.
-------------------- How easy it would be to live in England, if only one did not love her. - G.K. Chesterton
Posts: 9757 | From: Citizen of the World | Registered: Jun 2001
| IP: Logged
|
|
Doc Tor
Deepest Red
# 9748
|
Posted
If Gordon Brown was responsible for the entire global financial crash, imagine the power he has over your puny job.
-------------------- Forward the New Republic
Posts: 9131 | From: Ultima Thule | Registered: Jul 2005
| IP: Logged
|
|
Schroedinger's cat
Ship's cool cat
# 64
|
Posted
They should get back pay. The argument that "they should have checked" is a pitiful pile of shit. As others have said, tax law is extremely complex, which is why the wealthy can employ the people to fiddle as much as possible, and the poor can't.
Maybe the government should have checked what Brexit means. Perhaps MPs should have checked their expenses allowances.
Pay them back, you bunch of scheming, crooked shitheads.
-------------------- Blog Music for your enjoyment Lord may all my hard times be healing times take out this broken heart and renew my mind.
Posts: 18859 | From: At the bottom of a deep dark well. | Registered: May 2001
| IP: Logged
|
|
Ricardus
Shipmate
# 8757
|
Posted
I underpaid tax one year (by about three hundred quid) and, in order to maintain my feeling of moral superiority over Vodafone, I informed HMRC.
It took them about two years to sort out. I can understand why people don't bother.
-------------------- Then the dog ran before, and coming as if he had brought the news, shewed his joy by his fawning and wagging his tail. -- Tobit 11:9 (Douai-Rheims)
Posts: 7247 | From: Liverpool, UK | Registered: Nov 2004
| IP: Logged
|
|
|
Contact us | Ship of Fools | Privacy statement
© Ship of Fools 2016
UBB.classicTM
6.5.0
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|