Originally posted by french frank
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Profit
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostAs I'd noted! Connected? You betcha! I bought a job lot of apostrophies at the local car boot sale last Sunday and I've just sold them all at 300% gross profit (don't tell the taxman).
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostAs I'd noted! Connected? You betcha! I bought a job lot of apostrophies at the local car boot sale last Sunday and I've just sold them all at 300% gross profit (don't tell the taxman).
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostThat's even better than Maggie's sixpence to a shilling - are you from a gentrified background?
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostAh, indeed! But did he or anyone on his behalf tell the taxman?
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There are a few areas where non profit may present "issues" for some.
1. A company which makes a profit, but then uses part of that profit to subsidise a loss making enterprise.
I think at least one recording company did that because the guy at the top wanted to have a legacy of recordings by a British composer.
Whats's wrong? Not much, unless you are an accountant!
2. People who work for nothing, or very little, Some work in the NHS. I knew one male nurse who would even turn up to work on his days off. Great guy.
Why did he do that? Was it a sense of responsibility, or did he really like the work? Some of it was probably rewarding, but some may have been unpleasant.
3. Voluntary workers. School governors, councillors, magistrates etc.?
Why?
An argument against paying them is that "it would attract the wrong sort of people", and there are others, but would some remuneration make sense?
Do these people really like what they do, or are they driven by a sense of social reponsibility?
4. Then there are people who genuinely like what they do, and would do it anyway, whether paid or not.
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostThere are a few areas where non profit may present "issues" for some.
3. Voluntary workers. School governors, councillors, magistrates etc.?
Why?
An argument against paying them is that "it would attract the wrong sort of people", and there are others, but would some remuneration make sense?
Once you get into the area of remuneration of trustees and the like you run the risk of a conflict of interest, ie. these individuals are supposed to be without a vested interest. The executives of an organisation, with which you seem to be confusing those charged with governance, are the ones who will get remunerated.
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Originally posted by Sir Velo View PostMost of these will have their expenses reimbursed, so will not be out of pocket. As such this theoretically enables anyone from any walk of life to act in the capacity of governance.
Of course there are some voluntary positions where the "benefits" to those carrying them out may be of interest, such as travel and subsistence, but not all are like that. If one likes travel, and doesn't mind the "work" then some people might find such positions appealing. The fact is there are still many "jobs" which people don't have to do, are effectively unpaid, yet people still do them.
Also, there is a very large work force of hidden workers, who may care for children, sick and elderly people, often, but not always, relatives. Some of these give up the chance to become richer themselves in order to help others, while in the meantime the "wealth creators" carry on.
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Originally posted by Sir Velo View PostMost of these will have their expenses reimbursed, so will not be out of pocket. As such this theoretically enables anyone from any walk of life to act in the capacity of governance.
Originally posted by Sir Velo View PostOnce you get into the area of remuneration of trustees and the like you run the risk of a conflict of interest, ie. these individuals are supposed to be without a vested interest. The executives of an organisation, with which you seem to be confusing those charged with governance, are the ones who will get remunerated.
Also, getting sufficient numbers of sufficiently well qualified people to act in capacities such as that of trustee might not always be as easy as it seems. Pension trustees, for example, bear enormous responsibilities for those contributing to their pensions (be they employees, employers or the self-employed) and even for those with pensions already vested (i.e. in payment); the consequences of their getting things wrong can be immense for large numbers of people. I don't know how many pension trustees there are working at any one time in UK but, given the number of pensions providers and the numbers of people contributing to and receiving pensions, I imagine that the number cannot be small. Would you expect all such people to do all of ther work without remuneration? Apart from any other considerations, those who do unpaid voluntary work can neither be "sacked" as such nor forced to continue to work in their voluntary capacities.
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostNo. This is not always the case, unless the expenses are significant. Also the time involved can be very considerable, and people who are solely interested in making money (profit) would find "better" things to do.
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Originally posted by ahinton View Post
I don't see that; surely everyone who works has some kind of vested interest/s, be that work paid or unpaid or be it for a charity, or an employer, or one's own business; conflicts of interest can risk arising in many walks of working life and on all strata of working hierarchies (for want of a better word), sometimes deliberately, sometimes unwittingly and sometimes unavoidably - and it's not necessarily anyone's fault either.
Originally posted by ahinton View PostAlso, getting sufficient numbers of sufficiently well qualified people to act in capacities such as that of trustee might not always be as easy as it seems. Pension trustees, for example, bear enormous responsibilities for those contributing to their pensions (be they employees, employers or the self-employed) and even for those with pensions already vested (i.e. in payment); the consequences of their getting things wrong can be immense for large numbers of people. I don't know how many pension trustees there are working at any one time in UK but, given the number of pensions providers and the numbers of people contributing to and receiving pensions, I imagine that the number cannot be small.
Originally posted by ahinton View PostWould you expect all such people to do all of ther work without remuneration?
Originally posted by ahinton View PostApart from any other considerations, those who do unpaid voluntary work can neither be "sacked" as such nor forced to continue to work in their voluntary capacities.
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