Why do those who save have to subsidise the spenders?
Did you
see the recent news article about better off pensioners subsidising those with
no savings by several hundred pounds a week when care home fees hit?
That has
prompted me to re-visit a subject close to our hearts.
I
realise that some people simply cannot save huge amounts and that the so-called
middle classes with assets should pay their way but there is something
intrinsically unfair about the current system.
I say
this because those able to save more probably earned more during their working
life and therefore paid more in income tax and National Insurance.
Of
course the better off should always help those less fortunate – that’s what a
decent society does – but shouldn’t there be a level playing field for our elderly?
When MIL
needed specialist care in 2016 (see IDGOM
97, November 2016) our family visited 21 dementia care homes (all privately
run) in Suffolk. Weekly costs ranged from £690 per week to £1,420, with the
average being £969.
Among them
were several owned and run by Care UK. Suffolk County Council closed its 16
care homes a few years ago and struck a deal with Care UK to build several new
homes in the county – on the proviso they moved the council-funded residents
into the new homes at a flat rate fee of £650 a week per resident.
We were
quoted £1,050 for a residential dementia room for MIL by Care UK – which meant
she would be getting the same care as council-funded residents but paying
£20,000 a year more.
Is that
fair? Discuss.
I love
the value offered by the German discount supermarkets. Shopping in Aldi or Lidl
can save you a packet compared with the Tesco, Sainsburys, ASDA and, in
particular, Waitrose of the UK food chain.
But boy
oh boy do you need the patience of Job when it comes to checkout in these
Germanic outlets.
It’s like
an Olympic sport, with both supermarkets wanting customers to handle their
purchases four times –putting the shopping in the trolley, then emptying the
trolley onto the conveyor belt, putting it all back at break-neck speed into
the trolley before retiring to the front of store to pack purchases into your
bags.
I have
lost count of the number of times I have been told not to pack my bags at the
checkout. And of the number of times I have ignored them and carried on.
My
reader may be wondering why, if I don’t like the system, I continue to use Aldi
and Lidl.
Because
they are the Ryanair of food shopping – reasonable cost but no customer
service.