In
my blog of 5 October I suggested that certain UK sections, notably government
ministers, would deliberately mess with ‘temperature tests’ in their bid to
curtail expat British tax payers’ winter fuel payments. It hasn’t taken long:
the Mail did it this Thursday, 14 November (second column).
And
on Friday, 15 November the Mail published an amusing cartoon, based on one of
the previous day’s news items.
As
a retired expat living in Spain, I take exception to Mac’s cartoon. I admire
Mac’s skill, and yes, I can see the joke. But it panders to a mistaken image of
retirees that borders on the offensive, as well as being misguided in fact. I
doubt if any retirees would take a dip in a swimming pool during the winter
months. And not all buy vino by the van-load. And we certainly wouldn’t be
spending the winter fuel payment on wine, but on bottled gas to keep warm (see
below).
Your
sensational page 2 item (Thursday, November 14, ‘Cost of winter fuel perk for
expats in sun soars by 70%’) perpetuates the myth.
Concerning
the UK Winter fuel payments, ‘Work and Pensions Secretary Iain Duncan Smith
yesterday said… huge increase in UK winter fuel payments equates to a near
doubling in costs to the British taxpayer and that is wholly unacceptable… we
are not prepared to sit back and allow hard-working taxpayers’ money to be used
in this way.’
Clearly,
Mr Smith has forgotten that many British expats still pay UK taxes, and I’m one of
them. And we’ve been hard-working throughout our adult life, paying our taxes, before
retiring. If the fuel payment is a ‘perk’ for all British taxpayers, then where
they live shouldn’t matter.
Indeed,
I take issue when dubious science in the form of ‘temperature tests’ is applied.
Your article is a prime example of supplying favourable data to bolster the
anti-expat argument. You state ‘… Spain, where temperatures in December and
January can reach 63F (17C)…’ You’re being selective. A reality check online
would show that for the Costa Blanca, where I and many expats live, the
temperatures for December and January are very different: December (High=17,
low=7), January (High= 16, low= 5) – that’s ten or more degrees lower than you
cite.
Anyone
with a grain of geographical knowledge knows that while days in Spain may be
pleasantly warm in winter, evenings are cold. It’s a little disingenuous to
apply a ‘temperature test’ at midday, which is what you have quoted.
In winter,
the houses in Spain still require heating. This heating is in the main supplied
by bottled gas, whose prices have increased considerably over the last six
years, thanks to green taxes. My bottled gas bill for the winter 2011-12
amounted to 1,160 euros (about £981).
Through their UK taxes, most British pensioners living in Spain and claiming the fuel payments, actually pay towards Mr Iain Duncan Smith’s and all civil servants’ wages. It seems that expats are considered a soft target. Yet these same pensioners paid into the system. Since the rules entitle them to a monetary benefit, why should Mr Smith see fit to penalise these same taxpayers? A cynic might consider that it’s political expediency with small risk at the next election.
In conclusion, I always have the option of no
longer buying the expensive Daily Mail – that should go a long way to paying
for my gas bottles.
Footnote to this blog: All of Europe is currently experiencing arctic blasts of cold weather. Ours in the Costa Blanca today was as low as 3 degrees. It's naïve of me to think so, but if figures are going to be used in an argument, then I'd expect them to be right!
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