Expat68 Posted 10 hours ago Posted 10 hours ago 2 hours ago, a3tsw said: Yes and more than a few on here do just that… I would never spragg, it is not in my nature but I would not shed a tear for them if they were caught
Popular Post save the frogs Posted 10 hours ago Popular Post Posted 10 hours ago 17 hours ago, Kinnock said: I reckon most pensioner in the UK take money out of the system by requiring free hospital treatment. Pensioners in Thailand cost them nothing and some also pay UK taxes. good point I hadn't thought of. they are not using the hospital system. probably a net gain for the govt then. so it makes no sense then to freeze the pensions. 1 2 1
Jiggo Posted 10 hours ago Posted 10 hours ago Been going on for decades, but if he moves to the Philippines he would get the full current UK state pension. 1
Kinok Farang Posted 8 hours ago Posted 8 hours ago 13 hours ago, Ben Zioner said: How could that happen to a "former banker"? Rhyming slang. 2
geisha Posted 8 hours ago Posted 8 hours ago 15 hours ago, worgeordie said: Not the Christopher Lee ,I knew , We all would like more pension ,but the Government won't give it ,they need the money for all the immigrants ,but Chris knew coming here what the situation was , myself I get 90 quid a week ,because I retired early ,it is what it is , no way is the Government going to help us ,it's like out of sight out of mind , regards Worgeordie But he’s been here for 15 years. I know many of you have been and longer, Would anyone have known then that their pensions would be frozen later on ? Thailand was cheaper to live in too 15 yrs ago, so it must have looked attractive over the UK or many other colder countries. I find it’s disgusting, you pay in alll your working life to get what ? I’m glad I don’t live in the UK, left in 1969, and I’m so glad . 1
jori123 Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago 11 hours ago, KannikaP said: Problem there is if someone returns to UK and tells DWP they are 'back for good', they will ask how long have they been out of UK, deduct any increases you have got illegally since then. Then they will keep their eye on your Passport comings and goings. Where did this utter gem come from,you must have had this information lifted from somewhere,where? ".Deduct increases"? Are you sure of this? Who is going to deduct them? "Return to UK" OK returned,never asked that, "illegally " you state,where is it stated its "illegal" "passport comings and goings" are u sure of this?"keeping eyes open" must have been sleeping then last few times i traversed 5 hours ago, Expat68 said: 5 hours ago, Expat68 said: I would never spragg, it is not in my nature but I would not shed a tear for them if they were caught Well there will be no tears shed from you then Wonder where the chief organiser of DWP rules and regulations has disappeared to,usually first off on this subject RIP to him if he's jettisoned off the mortal coil
jori123 Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago Returned uk,after cancer alert in calcutta,india, thailand too expensive, then uk ,treatment straight away,showered with benefits 1500 quid straight off,450 a month tax free too,3 months treatment at least,back to thailand, after a while back to uk knee op after few months. Could not give a toss,fact is encouraged to return to th,keeping the 450 a month tax free too paid my whack on giving end now on receiving end,but still paying national debt off in income tax oh still unfrozen,never been frozen and dwp knew it all those years ago 1
Hanuman2547 Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago This is a messed-up system. You paid into it for all of your working life. Now that you are of age to receive it, you should be able to receive it wherever you live in the world and collect all of the steps in the system when they occur. This includes anytime that the benefit you are entitled to receives an increase.
Andycoops Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago Imagine receiving financial advice from him unless of course he was the janitor. No mention of any private or company pension, why? PPS
impulse Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago 8 hours ago, sambum said: And what about the pound that bounces round the Phillippines or the USA or.....? How does that benefit the British economy? Or the British taxpayer?
UbonEagle Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago Understand the OP frustration of rule changes that are not "grandfathered"...but if roughly $100AUD a week (the difference between indexed and non indexed pension) is making or breaking his ability to live the lifestyle he desires... Then clearly he didn't plan too well for retirement 🤔 1
Presnock Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago 21 hours ago, worgeordie said: Not the Christopher Lee ,I knew , We all would like more pension ,but the Government won't give it ,they need the money for all the immigrants ,but Chris knew coming here what the situation was , myself I get 90 quid a week ,because I retired early ,it is what it is , no way is the Government going to help us ,it's like out of sight out of mind , regards Worgeordie Yeah, just like the USA. Congress in working up the new govt budget is cutting the benefits and govt share of the health insurance costs by increasing 3.3% of the monthly input for retirement, plus will not pay the 72% of health insurance, plus some other changes too - on the contract that these civil servents signed onto 40 years ago - then they gave the civil servents the choice of joining the new system as opposed to the old system (of which I luckily did not agree to the changes - as a manager when asked if folks should change over to the new system my response was "why is the government doing these changes? answer - to save money - from where? - your pockets) thus not so many of us did change but some did. There were some positives to the new system but I liked the security of the old system and it worked out well for me. But there are even some more minor adjustments possibly going to be recommended to so I am absolutely positivie that the current civil servents are not going to be happy and also it will mean that getting a lot of folks to join the civil service will change - But, then if the economy tanks, folks will be looking for a job just about anywhere! Have a great (HOT) day!
wavodavo Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago 19 hours ago, Patong2021 said: No it is not. He is more likely to be being paid out more than what he paid in. It is an acknowledged fact that National Insurance contributions do not fully cover the cost of pension payouts for the majority of beneficiaries. It is not the UK taxpayer's fault that Thailand did not agree to a social security agreement with the UK. The EEA group of nations, the Philippines , much of the larger Commonwealth Caribbean countries, Turkey and the USA have an agreement. He picked Thailand, a nation without an agreement. There is no reciprocal agreement with the UK. If there was, he could get his adjustment. It takes 2 to make an agreement and Thailand did not agree. As a resident of Thailand, he is not paying any UK income tax is he? He pays his tax in Thailand, and most likely is at a lower tax rate than in the UK. None of what he receives is spent in the UK in goods and services nor paid in taxes to the crown. The pensioners in the UK are paying taxes in the UK on their income in excess of £12,570 and they pay VAT and many, pay council tax either in full or in part. The cost of living is higher for UK residents than it is for Thailand residents. The UK pensioners spend their pensions in the UK and many have a part of their pensions clawed back by the UK government. 19 hours ago, Patong2021 said: No it is not. He is more likely to be being paid out more than what he paid in. It is an acknowledged fact that National Insurance contributions do not fully cover the cost of pension payouts for the majority of beneficiaries. It is not the UK taxpayer's fault that Thailand did not agree to a social security agreement with the UK. The EEA group of nations, the Philippines , much of the larger Commonwealth Caribbean countries, Turkey and the USA have an agreement. He picked Thailand, a nation without an agreement. There is no reciprocal agreement with the UK. If there was, he could get his adjustment. It takes 2 to make an agreement and Thailand did not agree. As a resident of Thailand, he is not paying any UK income tax is he? He pays his tax in Thailand, and most likely is at a lower tax rate than in the UK. None of what he receives is spent in the UK in goods and services nor paid in taxes to the crown. The pensioners in the UK are paying taxes in the UK on their income in excess of £12,570 and they pay VAT and many, pay council tax either in full or in part. The cost of living is higher for UK residents than it is for Thailand residents. The UK pensioners spend their pensions in the UK and many have a part of their pensions clawed back by the UK government. Don't forget that this pensioner has not cost the NHS one pound in all the years he has lived in Thailand . That must have saved the Government heaps.
Nemo. Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago 19 hours ago, save the frogs said: I don't know. If that's the case, then there must be some sort of agreement with the other countries. Then maybe my theory is off. It's due to reciprocal agreements. If none the state pension is frozen. Could be short sighted though as if sick pensioners return to UK they cost more to the NHS. Although anyone relying on the state pension really should have saved a lot more. For me it's just a top up to cover increased medical costs when I reach 67. 1
KannikaP Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago 2 hours ago, jori123 said: Where did this utter gem come from,you must have had this information lifted from somewhere,where? Believe it or not Mr Jori, I produced that myself, no AI, Chat GPT or anything. It just seemed a logical thing to say or ask. Sorry you did not think the same as I did.
KannikaP Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago 2 hours ago, jori123 said: Returned uk,after cancer alert in calcutta,india, thailand too expensive, then uk ,treatment straight away,showered with benefits 1500 quid straight off,450 a month tax free too,3 months treatment at least,back to thailand, after a while back to uk knee op after few months. Could not give a toss,fact is encouraged to return to th,keeping the 450 a month tax free too paid my whack on giving end now on receiving end,but still paying national debt off in income tax oh still unfrozen,never been frozen and dwp knew it all those years ago No need to shout. Turn Bold OFF. 1
jori123 Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 12 minutes ago, KannikaP said: No need to shout. Turn Bold OFF. Sorry also,am on small phone,hard to type not only A1 but rules easy to read there is no punishment so that's it, it's policy,not legislation
KannikaP Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 5 minutes ago, jori123 said: Sorry also,am on small phone,hard to type not only A1 but rules easy to read there is no punishment so that's it, it's policy,not legislation So if someone was caught claiming full Pension increases while still living here, would the DWP not want some of it back.
Popular Post BritManToo Posted 1 hour ago Popular Post Posted 1 hour ago 31 minutes ago, Nemo. said: Although anyone relying on the state pension really should have saved a lot more. For me it's just a top up to cover increased medical costs when I reach 67. Most of the UK population barely earn enough to pay for food and housing. They have no money to speculate on investments and pension plans. And if they did, their wife would get most of it in the divorce. 1 2 1
mikebell Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 22 hours ago, webfact said: At 70, the former banker relies on a weekly £137 Mine's £93 a week after 44 years of service.
mikebell Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 9 hours ago, save the frogs said: good point I hadn't thought of. they are not using the hospital system. probably a net gain for the govt then. so it makes no sense then to freeze the pensions. They saved billions in pensions when Covid was encouraged to spread through retirement homes. 1
NoshowJones Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 18 hours ago, nakhonandy said: It's wrong and we all know it. To be fair we knew this when we decided to retire to Thailand. The government won't change this rule as it's too expensive to do so and we don't vote anyhow so we have no power. I did not know the annual UK state pension increases were frozen until I moved to Thailand but I had a good few years to go before I reached pension age.
maxcorrigan Posted 55 minutes ago Posted 55 minutes ago Don't know if this has been mentioned, when we in the EU this unfair practise was brought up, tony blair that well known so called socialist fought tooth and nail to get it stopped and apparently was succefull (sp) good old toe eh! 1
KannikaP Posted 51 minutes ago Posted 51 minutes ago 32 minutes ago, NoshowJones said: I did not know the annual UK state pension increases were frozen until I moved to Thailand but I had a good few years to go before I reached pension age. But now it is pegged at what it was 20 years ago? 1
Woke to Sounds Posted 40 minutes ago Posted 40 minutes ago Fellow should've become a bankster not a banker, then all would be well.
billd766 Posted 36 minutes ago Posted 36 minutes ago 7 hours ago, geisha said: But he’s been here for 15 years. I know many of you have been and longer, Would anyone have known then that their pensions would be frozen later on ? Thailand was cheaper to live in too 15 yrs ago, so it must have looked attractive over the UK or many other colder countries. I find it’s disgusting, you pay in alll your working life to get what ? I’m glad I don’t live in the UK, left in 1969, and I’m so glad . Anybody that did any research before coming to Thailand would have known that. In addition the other factor to take into consideration is the Forex rate which changes daily and in many cases more than once a day.
Upnotover Posted 26 minutes ago Posted 26 minutes ago 2 hours ago, Andycoops said: Imagine receiving financial advice from him unless of course he was the janitor. No mention of any private or company pension, why? PPS From the story...."Adding to his woes is a modest private pension that fails to deliver the retirement he envisioned." He must have something as he managed to retire at 55, 10 years before starting to receive his state pension. 1
simon43 Posted 23 minutes ago Posted 23 minutes ago 25 minutes ago, KannikaP said: But now it is pegged at what it was 20 years ago? The pension will be pegged at the amount paid in the UK on your retirement date. So I retire in 6 weeks from now and so my UK pension will start to be paid at the current UK rate. But next year, when that amount increases in the UK (due to the triple lock), my pension will remain the same as before. That won't make a huge difference in the short-term, but would be important some 10 or 20 years down the line. 1
KannikaP Posted 6 minutes ago Posted 6 minutes ago 18 minutes ago, simon43 said: The pension will be pegged at the amount paid in the UK on your retirement date. Will it not be pegged at what you were getting when you ''left'' UK' if you leave after retirement?
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