sailorman
Well-Known Member
They also pay tax`s tooNone at all.....but if you start down that road..
Pensioners so far have been virtually immune from goverment cuts.....The old bugggers vote![]()
They also pay tax`s tooNone at all.....but if you start down that road..
Pensioners so far have been virtually immune from goverment cuts.....The old bugggers vote![]()
My normal reply to this is "don't get me started on final salary pension schemes" , but as you did......
The short answer is that this is all going to end in tears for the people expecting these pensions. I am not commenting on whether they are right to expect them or not, but just telling them the sad economic truth. The people that fund these sorts of things (harbour users, or tax-payers or whatever) are just going to eventually say no to the increased levy on their fees or taxes that are required to find the payments.
You can bleat all you like about long term expectations, years of service or anything else. Simple truth is that final salary pension schemes are the worst example of a state or corporation promoted Ponzi scheme known to man. The idea that future contributions will fund past commitments (which is the basis of National Insurance) is a scam that virtually the entire population chooses to ignore.
The 10% of the population that is not on government benefit or working in the public sector is not going to be willing to fund the retirement of the other 90%. Tears will be shed.
Sorry to all harbour masters. Time to brush up on your harbour taxi driving skills.
Pensioner..The old bugggers vote![]()
None at all.....but if you start down that road..
Pensioners so far have been virtually immune from goverment cuts.....The old bugggers vote![]()
Of all the reasons,this is probably not the case in this instance.
You will be hard pressed to get any money out of the commercial sector,we have already seen a couple of departures of people up here on the Medway due to decline in traffic.Our upriver pilot no longer is needed due to the last of our wharfs shutting,she has gone elsewhere.
The ships are simply not calling anymore.The money to pay for all the pensions of a generation of previous pilots will have to come from somewhere !
Unless of course you want to reduce their pensions !
If you increase any of the tariffs on visiting vessels the cargos will simply go to Rotterdam or elsewhere and have be shipped here by lorry.
One possibility could be to pursue the trustees who have presided over this disaster for at least some of the deficit.
Clearly we are all living too long.
At last! someone else who still believes in Father Christmas!
Not really, too many senior managers can fail those below them with no penalty, and even end up better off. The trustees do need to be made accountable personally for the management of these funds, and the fund managing companies also need to take a hit, at present managing pension funds is risk free money for old rope.
Not really, too many senior managers can fail those below them with no penalty, and even end up better off. The trustees do need to be made accountable personally for the management of these funds, and the fund managing companies also need to take a hit, at present managing pension funds is risk free money for old rope.
This is very simple. The British public elected Tony Blair who in turn appointed Gordon brown as chancellor. Gordon Brown then taxed the pensions funds and at that time it was estimated that £5bn a year was being extracted. If you compound this amount and allow for the growth in the funds since then it probably amounts to in excess of £100bn pounds. The effect of this tax is that employers are obliged by law to make up this shortfall consequently nearly every "final salary" pension scheme in the UK is either closed or closed to new members.
This cause and effect was entirely predictable and the consequences we will not fully feel for another 30 years.needless to say those born in the 70's, 80's and 90's are likely to be the main losers.