Mr Anchovy,
I have repeatedly made the point that my advice on this forum is meant for owner/directors of small companies who find themselves to be in a situation where their company is insolvent, they do not have the money to appoint an insolvency practitioner, and they potentially face personal bankruptcy if they make an injudicious decision.
I have helped hundreds of people in these circumstances get their lives back on track. I receive regular updates on how people are faring in their new businesses or jobs and how valuable my advice was in surviving the perils of insolvency.
I have never had one - not one - piece of negative feedback regarding the effectiveness of my plan or my advice. It works because broadly it stays on the right side of all relevent legislation and where it may stretch the line a little it is only where the chances of repurcussions are minimal if not non-existent.
The most illuminating post that you have made in the last few days was in response to Homshaw suggesting that there was nothing to stop anyone 'fiddling the system'.
No suggestion of any moral imperative; no argument that pushing at the boundaries of the law is impirically wrong or ethically indefensible; simply that the potential sanctions are sufficient to keep you on the straight and narrow.
In this you show yourself to be little different to the rest of the human race. Most of us obey laws because we fear the repurcussions of getting caught transgressing them, not because of any particular inate adherence to a moral code. The decision whether or not to obey a particular law boils down to a cost/benefit calculation based on the potential gain, the liklihood of being caught, and the sanctions the state is likely to enforce against us.
Yet in other posts you come across as an insufferable self-righteous prig who has never so much as parked on a yellow line!
What I would ask you is this;
What advice would you offer to a hard-working and very honest small businessman whose company has seen its turnover fall off a cliff over the last twelve months, and whose cash reserves have been exhausted merely covering day-to-day expenses. CGT of £10k is due and he is 6 months behind with his VAT returns and PAYE/NI
The company has no cash and negligable assets. He has an overdrawn Directors Loan Account of £10k due to his accountant not explaining properly the 'low salary/pay yourself dividends' scheme that is now ubiquitous. He is desperate, depressed, and contemplating suicide. He also has a wife and small family.
This is exactly the type of person I routinely help to get themselves back on their feet. What practical advice would you offer, or would you simply comdemn them for being so incompetent as to get into such a mess?
I'd love to know.
I have repeatedly made the point that my advice on this forum is meant for owner/directors of small companies who find themselves to be in a situation where their company is insolvent, they do not have the money to appoint an insolvency practitioner, and they potentially face personal bankruptcy if they make an injudicious decision.
I have helped hundreds of people in these circumstances get their lives back on track. I receive regular updates on how people are faring in their new businesses or jobs and how valuable my advice was in surviving the perils of insolvency.
I have never had one - not one - piece of negative feedback regarding the effectiveness of my plan or my advice. It works because broadly it stays on the right side of all relevent legislation and where it may stretch the line a little it is only where the chances of repurcussions are minimal if not non-existent.
The most illuminating post that you have made in the last few days was in response to Homshaw suggesting that there was nothing to stop anyone 'fiddling the system'.
Well the threat of 10 years inside is enough to stop me doing it
No suggestion of any moral imperative; no argument that pushing at the boundaries of the law is impirically wrong or ethically indefensible; simply that the potential sanctions are sufficient to keep you on the straight and narrow.
In this you show yourself to be little different to the rest of the human race. Most of us obey laws because we fear the repurcussions of getting caught transgressing them, not because of any particular inate adherence to a moral code. The decision whether or not to obey a particular law boils down to a cost/benefit calculation based on the potential gain, the liklihood of being caught, and the sanctions the state is likely to enforce against us.
Yet in other posts you come across as an insufferable self-righteous prig who has never so much as parked on a yellow line!
What I would ask you is this;
What advice would you offer to a hard-working and very honest small businessman whose company has seen its turnover fall off a cliff over the last twelve months, and whose cash reserves have been exhausted merely covering day-to-day expenses. CGT of £10k is due and he is 6 months behind with his VAT returns and PAYE/NI
The company has no cash and negligable assets. He has an overdrawn Directors Loan Account of £10k due to his accountant not explaining properly the 'low salary/pay yourself dividends' scheme that is now ubiquitous. He is desperate, depressed, and contemplating suicide. He also has a wife and small family.
This is exactly the type of person I routinely help to get themselves back on their feet. What practical advice would you offer, or would you simply comdemn them for being so incompetent as to get into such a mess?
I'd love to know.
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