T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1066.1 | Still worth it for me | STRIKR::LINDLEY | Strewth mate..... | Thu May 10 1990 13:47 | 20 |
| I think (in my case) that its still worth it. I do over 2500 company
miles a year (not much over), about 20,000 - 25,000 private miles a
year, and have chosen to lease a car from a manufacturer prepared to
discount heavily to Hertz/PHH.
I did the sums when I first got my Pug, it was marginally cheaper over
the 30 months than buying a 1 year old car, adding over 50,000 miles,
paying insurance etc.
I went through the same excersise to see if it was worth leasing or
buying a 16V Astra, and came to the conclusion that its still slightly
cheaper to lease - though its much more marginal than before. Next
years budget will be a vote catcher, I dont expect anything too nasty
to happen to car taxes.
Its also worth remembering that if you take the cash you only get about
�2850, whereas you can get about �3400 of car on "the scheme".
John
|
1066.2 | | JUMBLY::DAY | No Good Deed Goes Unpunished | Thu May 10 1990 14:05 | 12 |
| It is marginal, but still worth it - but do your own personal
sums. I take care to do the 2500, and also to get a 1.4 capacity
car - one just on the 3400 boundary so that I don't pay extra.
In my case that equated to a Peugeot 1.4 CJ (convertible).
52 mpg on a long run - North Norfolk and back without a refill -
at a steady 70+ on the motorway.
You could do worse.
Mike Day
|
1066.3 | Just pay us properly! | ANNECY::PARKER | | Thu May 10 1990 14:43 | 24 |
|
.1 Define 3400 worth of car!
I have just spoken with Coopers & Lybrand about the tax position
as my overseas contract is coming to an end. They reckon that the
40% tax is not really a factor for a married man (wife not working)
with mortgage until your total package hits 30K pounds. This is
because the 40% rate applies on Taxable income after personal
allowances come into play. So if you are on say 22K + level 8/9
car allowance your total package in taking the money would be
about 26K. With all the allowances youwont pay any of that at
40%.
As far as I can see the whole system is corrupt, UK is the only
country in Europe that has this stigma/status symbol of company
cars. I reckon our huge trade deficit would be much reduced if
people had to think about the REAL costs of running
a particular car. We should just be paid the right salary for the
job then the individual can decide to spend it on what he wants.
you'd be surprised at the number of people here who drive to work
in old Renault 4,5's/2CV's minis etc!...and they earn salaries that
would make their UK equivalents turn green!!
Dave in Annecy
|
1066.4 | CCT not the only reason | DOOZER::JENKINS | A Fiesta of Dorises | Thu May 10 1990 14:54 | 50 |
|
I've just "opted out" of the car scheme. There were four reasons
for my decision.
- The high prices of vehicles on the scheme, no doubt in part due
to the excessively high interest rates
- The continually increasing CCT.
- If I "opted in" this time I was stuck.
- I didn't need a brand new tinbox.
The big plus of the scheme for me was that it cost the same
irrespective of mileage. Doing a high mileage, mostly personal
meant that I was being "subsidised" by the scheme.
For the last two budgets I was quite frightened that the Government
would, as it had claimed, "double the CCT". Having a car of over
2 litres, that would have been a lot of money. I think now though,
that my fear probably wasn't justified. Although, I'm sure the
politicians would like the extra tax, the net effect of increasing
the CCT over and above a value where the car ceased to be a perk
would probably induce companies to stop offering cars as perks.
The knock on effects of this might have much greater political
consequences. I suspect that it would significantly reduce
new car sales and in doing so reduce overall tax revenues. On
every new car sold, the government do get a hefty slice of car tax
and VAT. The politicians might also have reflected that a drop in
demand in the car industry might have lead to job losses in the
car manufacturing and associated industries.
On a related issue, but only marginally connected with the topic,
I would be very much in favour of changing the CCT structure to
encourage the leasing of British built cars. I don't believe there
should be any net tax relief available on "foreign" cars. If people
were encouraged to "lease British" this would IMO, be a good thing.
Subsiding people to buy Mercs, BMWs, Japanese cars and others seems
to me to be crazy. It causes problems with the balance of payments,
doesn't help maintain the British car industry or its workforce
and provides little or no benefit.
I would like to make it clear, that I am not in favour of import
controls or extra taxes, for people who wish to buy privately, but
I would like to remove any element of the "tax" subsidy that does
exist today for leasing.
|
1066.5 | UK is a distorted market | ANNECY::PARKER | | Thu May 10 1990 16:29 | 47 |
|
.4 makes a good point about giving incentives to British made cars
but there are some problems with that.
- How do you define a Britsh made car?
Rover uses honda engines, Peugeot gearboxes etc although
all made in UK (except the 2.7V6 in the Rover 827 and Sterling).
Ford market share of 24% includes 10.5% imported
Vauxhall market share contains 6% imported
most 405 Pugs sold in UK are now made in UK except estates.
- Protectionism can breed weakness in the local manufacturer
We don't need legislation, just a policy to pay people properly
with higher rate of tax. Then people would spend their money on the cars
they want to buy......and a lot less will be choosing foreign cars
when its personal funds that foot servicing etc bills.
In Digital France company cars are rare, Field people have them
but they are nearly always French built models (and rightly so),
DEC Germany is the same I believe. The attitude seems to be "If
you want to buy foreign cars you pay for them yourself".
It is often overlooked that the reason UK is
so unique in having such a high % of company cars was that it was
seen as a Tax break, a way to reward people without actually paying
them more. This has led over the years to people taking a frivolous
attitude to the real cost of running cars and the people who now
drive BM's Mercs etc are often not really in the income bracket of BM/Merc
drivers in other countries.
Now the government is taxing company cars people 'hooked'
on having a company car are starting to squeal.
Now we are screwing ourselves as private buyers because the whole
UK market is geared towards 'customers' like PHH/Hertz and the big
fleets who buy in lots of 10/100/1000 cars and get big discounts.
The laws of retailing/wholesaling show that when you run your business
in this way you penalise the 'one off' price....which is what the
private buyer has to pay.
I showed some UK car prices (VW as a matter of interest) to my local
VW dealer here in France. He was shocked at the prices we are paying
for VW's in UK. The differnce is that here the dealer has to fight
for each individual sale, there is no such thing as a 'fleet sales'
department of a French dealer.
Dave (willing to waffle on this subject as much as you like!)
|
1066.6 | | DOOZER::JENKINS | A Fiesta of Dorises | Thu May 10 1990 18:30 | 16 |
|
Re .5
I was suggesting the "UK only" subsidy as a half way house that
might prove to be politically acceptable. I say this because I
believe there would be serious repercussions in the UK car
industry if we stopped the company car perk overnight.
I don't think that providing this continued perk for UK cars
would be protectionism, although I accept that it might appear
as such. I would prefer to see it as an "inducement" to lease UK
vehicles as opposed to buying or leasing the "foreign" cars/vans.
|
1066.7 | Fine, until the phone rings..... | BAHTAT::HILTON | Two in the box ready to go | Fri May 11 1990 10:43 | 11 |
| Dave,
You mention a few back that many people drive to work in old Renault
4,5's and 2CV's.
This is fine, but do those same people ever have to 'nip' out to a
customers 2 hours drive away??
If so I would think they would then appreciate a new company car!
Greg
|
1066.8 | | UKCSSE::RDAVIES | Live long and prosper | Thu May 24 1990 15:05 | 16 |
| Just had an incident that highlights the value of the intangible
benefits: Last night my speedo stopped working.
If it was my own car I'd have probably been under the bonnet and dash
trying to solve it last night.
If I was concientious about keeping to a policy of putting it in the
garage for repairs, they can't fit it in until saturday. So I probably
would have driven without a speedo, thus no-doubt commiting two
offences, speeding, and driving with a defective speedo.
As it is, I rang Hertz: "It's a legal requirement, we'll give you a
relief car straight away"! I think I'll be leasing again!.
Richard
|
1066.9 | | CURRNT::PREECE | Nobody's fool but my own... | Fri May 25 1990 14:15 | 14 |
|
Humph ! I rang PHH when it happened to me....
"Take it to a garage and get it fixed."
"I did, they can't do it for a week"
"Well it doesn't stop the car from working, does it......."
Hmmm.
Ian
|
1066.10 | Poor quality finish on lease cars! | OVAL::KERRELLD | sponplatter lager | Fri May 25 1990 14:22 | 4 |
| Well that settles it for me! I've never leased and I've never had a broken
speedo. I'll carry on buying.
Dave.
|
1066.11 | What PRice ?? | VOGON::MORGAN | Compromise, do it MY way ! | Thu Mar 28 1991 08:11 | 11 |
| I'm pretty sure that this question has already been asked/debated but I
can't remember where...
With the driver being liable for extra tax for any car with a purchase
price ov �19,500 is this the list price OR the actual price paid for
the car. I'm thinking here of the 15%'ish discount that PHH get from
a number of dealers.
Thanks fro any advice and/or pointer to the existing discussion.
Rich
|
1066.12 | | CHEFS::CLEMENTSD | Public Sector and Telecomms | Thu Mar 28 1991 09:16 | 9 |
| I have a feeling that the value shown on the P11D that's submitted to
HMI shows what was the capital value paid and not "Book" or "list"
price. I only know of one person reported to have been able to
determine what that value was before ordering the car to make sure that
he wasn't stuffed (more) with extra car tax ...... mail me if you want
his name. The incident was a couple of years (ish) ago. Fleet may be
able to give you that number (which is basically the capital amount on
which PHH/Hertz will base the annual lease charge) once the quote has
been processed by tghem, but don't quote me on that ........
|
1066.13 | | KERNEL::SHELLEYR | RS with the RS (Spanish tin can) | Thu Mar 28 1991 09:19 | 12 |
| � �19,500
Rich,
I understand that it is the "on the road" price _including_ any extras
that are fitted. I would think this is before any discounting is
considered.
- Roy
|
1066.14 | car benefits | AYOV10::MORRISON | | Thu Mar 28 1991 09:51 | 14 |
|
I have an old Inland Revenue statement in my desk "car benefits and car
fuel benefits to 5 April 1990".
It uses the term "Cars with original market value more than �19250" to
define the amount of Car Benefit.
This doesn't seem to relate to what a leasing company pays for a car.
It's the list price.
|
1066.15 | Not that you are likely to get away with it | CRATE::RUTTER | Rut-The-Nut | Thu Mar 28 1991 13:06 | 12 |
| � It uses the term "Cars with original market value more than �19250" to
I thought it was based on the 'listed price' for a new car.
Otherwise, dealers would - in theory - be able to sell the car for
some low price (say �5000) but say that all extras (ie dust caps
on the tyre valves) would cost �20,000. In that way, you could
say you only pay tax on the �5000. At least the 'fiddle' could
work something like that, with figures being defined according
to any tax break limits, etc.
J.R.
|
1066.16 | Can you believe what you read in the papers | DOOZER::JENKINS | with the mother of hangovers | Tue Apr 02 1991 15:52 | 8 |
|
From a newspaper article I read recently, I believe its the list
price of the car that is used, not the price paid, and that
extras don't count towards this taxable total (Even though they are
subject to car tax).
R.
|
1066.17 | Price paid | BEEZER::MCGOWAN | | Mon Apr 08 1991 14:57 | 6 |
| I was told by car fleet that the actual price paid for the car was sent to
the inland revenue. I was worried that one of my quotes was going to be over,
but the kind gent at car fleet (forget his name) dug out the quote and told
me the price over the phone. It was under, so I ordered.
Pete.
|
1066.18 | Tax.. | VOGON::MORGAN | If only... | Wed Apr 24 1991 14:20 | 11 |
| Well after asking the same question to lots of dealers, to the INland
Revenue and fleet MY, and I emphasise, MY interpretation of the �19,250
rule is as follows;
If the total cost of the car plus whatever extras comes to over the
�19,250 BUT the lease company gets a discount from the garage which
brings the price dwon to under �19,250 then you DON'T incur any extra
car tax.
Rich
|
1066.19 | Watch out, there's a Tax man about! | SHAPES::KINGHORNJ | Funtime Software {:o) | Wed Apr 24 1991 15:19 | 6 |
|
I seem to remember my accountant said that if the list price is over
�19,250 but you get a discount below that amount then the Inland
Revenue (pedantic as ever) would want something in writing from the
garage saying the exact price. Otherwise they tax you at the higher
rate.
|
1066.21 | Huh? | KERNEL::SHELLEYR | RS with the RS (Spanish tin can) | Wed Apr 24 1991 17:49 | 5 |
| �the answer is not to get a BMW!
Why, several models come well under �19,250.
Roy
|
1066.22 | Doesn't like 'em | VOGON::MORGAN | If only... | Wed Apr 24 1991 17:54 | 4 |
| Re. 20 - Dereks just biased !! - so Elaine says
Rich
|
1066.23 | | NEWOA::SAXBY | Blessed are the Cheesemakers! | Wed Apr 24 1991 17:55 | 6 |
|
Re .22
How can you tell? :^)
Mark
|
1066.24 | | KERNEL::SHELLEYR | RS with the RS | Thu Jun 06 1991 11:48 | 10 |
| Can anyone confirm the current figures for taxable benefit an a company
car covering less than 2500 business miles for the classes of up to
1400cc and 1400-2000cc.
I think they are something like �2500 for <1400
and �3000 for 1.4-2.0
Cheers,
- Roy
|
1066.25 | | NEARLY::GOODENOUGH | | Thu Jun 06 1991 11:51 | 4 |
| Not offhand, but you should be able to find that on Channel 4 Oracle
(the section on personal taxation)
Jeff.
|
1066.26 | | SHAWB1::HARRISC | Not very nice at all | Thu Jun 06 1991 12:38 | 23 |
| From Payroll VTX:
1991/92
Cylinder Car Under 4 Years Old at
Capacity End oF Tax Year
-------- ------------------------
Upto 1400 cc 2050 Taxable Benefit
1401-2000 cc 2650 Taxable Benefit
over 2000 cc 4250 Taxable Benefit
Value over 19250(pounds)
----------------
19251-29000 5500 Taxable Benefit
29001 or more 8900 Taxable Benefit
If you travel under 2500 business miles per year the charge is 1.5
times the taxable benefit.
If you travel between 2500 and 17999 business miles per year the charge is
just the taxable benefit.
If you travel 18000 or over business miles the charge is 1/2 the taxable
benefit.
|