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I got a bonus from work this month. Not a particularly mental bonus. Two thirds of a month's wage. It's great. Every little helps and all that but the problem is I've been taxed over 100% more than normal on a pay slip that's only about 65% more than normal. I know the more you earn the more you get taxed but I'm not earning more.

 

I don't profess to know much about tax and how it works so I was hoping one of you geniuses has some experience of this shite. Does this seem normal? It's fucking daylight robbery IMO my opinion. I've heard that the amount that I'm taxed next month will be adjusted accordingly to make up for this but I've got no faith in that happening whatsoever.  :hammer:

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Didn't you know that Coldplay fans get taxed more? It's a new tax on the deaf.

sounds excessive. you might end up with a refund this time next year.

 

 

I got an unexpected cheque for £650 from HMRC this year, after £250 last year.  :thumbsup:  That and their massively bumming rangers up the shitter give me lols.

You'll most likely get some back next month  as you say.

 

 

The only year I wasn't taxed on a bonus was 2010 when we got a personal cheque from the company

 

Believe the only things on yer wage slip that cant be taxed are expenses such as fuel etc.

 

Slighty off at a tangent, but the common word is tax.......absolutely in favour of this, make the fat bastards stump up

 

This week an academic in Norway proposed a “pay as you weigh” scheme that would see airlines charging overweight fliers more to help recoup the cost of the extra fuel required to carry them.  In the Journal of Revenue and Pricing Management, Bharat P Bhatta suggested three methods: a straightforward price per kilogram; a fixed low fare, with heavier passengers paying a surcharge and lighter passengers being offered a discount; or the introduction of three bands – heavy, normal and light, with passengers charged accordingly.  His suggestions received the backing of 48 per cent of those questioned in a poll by the website Holiday Extras. The plans received slightly more support among men, with 51 per cent in favour, compared to 43 per cent of women.  “Sitting next to a large person on a plane can sometimes reduce the space that you have to relax,” said James Lewis of Holiday Extras. “If we have to pay extra for excess baggage, maybe we should pay extra for excess body weight.”    The problem of passenger obesity has become an increasingly pertinent issue for airlines in recent years. Adult obesity rates in the UK have almost quadrupled in the last quarter of a century, with around 22 per cent of Britons now considered obese. That compares to around 14 per cent of the European Union’s adult population, and more than 32 per cent of Americans.  “I think the simplest way to implement this would be for passengers to declare their weight when buying a plane ticket,” Dr Bhatta of Fjordane University College told The Daily Telegraph. “This would save time and eliminate expense. At the airport airlines could randomly select passengers and if they lied about their weight they would have to pay the fat fare and a penalty.”

Ian Yeoman, the editor of the Journal, endorsed Dr Bhatta’s proposal.

"For airlines, every extra kilogram means more expensive jet fuel must be burned, which leads to CO2 emissions and financial cost," he said.

"As the airline industry is fraught with financial difficulties, marginally profitable and has seen exponential growth in the last decade, maybe they should be looking to introduce scales at the check-in." 

Like that Al!

Like that Al!

 

Who hasn't played the game in the departure lounge of looking around and picking out the fatties you hope aren't sat either behind you, in front of you or God forbid next to you

I was once sat next to a huge guy eating tuna and egg sandwiches on a megabus to Glasgow. They were 5 of the longest hours of my life, I was sat on the window seat :(

*lol above smilie*

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