What is this...the Moral Maze or the Pedant’s Progress? Are you working from home and bored?
The more he donates the better he is and vice versa, but my personal stance would be...don’t bet on the misfortune of others - Leeds, Forest, Millwall and MUFC don’t count - and no, I won’t send him a Christmas card because I’ve no idea who he is!
Last edited by ramAnag; 26-03-2020 at 03:09 PM.
NO. Its a highly suspect IMO activity and contributes zilch to the economy. If he gave it all away and said nothing then I'd respect him a little but would suspect a guilty conscience!
I have far more admiration for those who are well paid for what they do but have paid out money they have earned rather than won through gambling or taken pay holidays.
On the subject of money...a question regarding the legislation relating to the self employed...possibly aimed at GP in particular.
I admire the self employed...at their best they show balls, initiative, determination and self sufficiency. Unfortunately, at their worst - in my limited experience - some are not averse to tax fiddles and tax evasion.
So, now - as I understand it - with their income streams disappearing and a rescue package being put in place which will be determined by their declared average profit over the last three years, are the less scrupulous about to be hoist by their own petard?
I ask out of interest, nothing more.
I'm still trying to work out who actually pays the "winnings" on these bets (or call/put/short options as they call them)?
I understand that if you buy a share and its' price goes up you make a profit, it goes down you make a loss. In both cases, only when you sell them on.
However, if you "bet", as this bloke appears to have done that the market (Dow Jones maybe?) will drop, you haven't bought anything as far as I know. How does this work?
In a nutshell yes, the compensatory payment will be based on last 3 years profits, which may well have been minimised. The exact hoisted expression is how I've described it myself.
That said, any self employed person who has recently applied for a mortgage may find the opposite!
One thing that is odd is the 50,000 profits cap. If an employee earns over 50k the employer can still recover 80% capped at 2500 per month. A self employed person is similarly capped at 2500 per month but on the face of it, if his past profits exceed 50k he gets nothing. This despite the fact that his business may have been wiped out.
Equally how do you prove that CV has caused a loss of revenue by June. It could be that businesses you deal with limp on and then go under in, say, September, causing you loss of revenue outside the compensation time frame.
Still it's a welcome relief, despite some possible inequities.