Welcome to Bookmarker!

This is a personal project by @dellsystem. I built this to help me retain information from the books I'm reading.

Source code on GitHub (MIT license).

Activity

You added a note
7 years, 11 months ago

the wrong relatives archive/so478

[...] The issue is not just between a lucky generation of baby-boomers now approaching retirement who got the best pension deals and benefited most from the house price boom, and a younger 'jilted generation' who have little. Many baby boomers have little wealth, and only a minority enough to see t…

—p.178 Good Times, Bad Times: The Welfare Myth of Them and Us The long wave (145) by John Hills
You added a note
7 years, 11 months ago

tax relief is worth most to the highest paid

Up to a basic level, it can be argued that there are public benefits from encouraging pension saving, as otherwise the state and taxpayer could end up having to do more of the job. But tax relief is worth most to the highest paid and goes disporportionately to them. For instance, a higher rate taxp…

—p.172 The long wave (145) by John Hills
You added a note
7 years, 11 months ago

political and fiscal human shield

[...] while it makes sense to protect state pensions, better-off pensioners could contribute more through the tax system. But the politics of this are fraught--when George Osborne announced the end of the extra tax-free allowance for those aged over 65, it was instantly condemned as a 'granny tax'.…

—p.170 The long wave (145) by John Hills
You added a note
7 years, 11 months ago

not simply one fortunate generation versus another

The equity issue--and the challenge for polices in a range of years--is not simply of one fortunate generation versus another. It is about the advantages of the better-off half of baby-boomers compared to_both_ poor baby-boomers and to those members of younger generations who do not stand to inhe…

—p.157 The long wave (145) by John Hills
You added a section
7 years, 11 months ago