pumpsmynads
Well-Known Member
3%. Which clearly only means I need a bigger boat.
Don’t get me wrong, loss of the value of our boat would be a very, very bad thing but we would remain viable, if not particularly happy! ?
.
The same here.
For me the value of buying and running a boat has been in mental health and wellbeing way before these words became as fashionable as they have more recently become.
The boat and the need to fund it has helped motivate me to carry on working.
Source?WEALTH TAX
It is strongly rumoured there is a wealth tax coming to help pay for the pandemic spending 1% per year for 5 years on anyone who has wealth of over £500000 which will include houses
Doesn’t sound good
People with wealth <£500kSource?
Sounds right and morality right , and I am happy to pay .WEALTH TAX
It is strongly rumoured there is a wealth tax coming to help pay for the pandemic spending 1% per year for 5 years on anyone who has wealth of over £500000 which will include houses
Doesn’t sound good
Yeah, quite. As ever....People with wealth <£500k
Sounds right and morality right , and I am happy to pay .
The same here.
For me the value of buying and running a boat has been in mental health and wellbeing way before these words became as fashionable as they have more recently become.
The boat and the need to fund it has helped motivate me to carry on working.
A boat is of course a collection of faults waiting to reveal themselves . I am not sure there is any such thin as fault free boat.+1
except when something else drops off or breaks .
Agreed, to make sense the equation needs to relate boat value to Net Worth. We choose to live in a small country cottage in Devon as we don’t need a large house in the SE (anymore) - we spend 6 months each year on board the yacht. Our boat is 13% of net worth, quite a lot, but then it is our home for six months of the year.Strange thread, as jfm said in 2004 there's no relation between the two 'assets '.
Sounds right and morality right , and I am happy to pay .