Masalahnya memang pada:

*Bagaimana kekayaan didapatkan dari (kekayaan) masyarakat lainnya...*

*dan*

*Bagaimana kekayaan bersama dikembalikan kepada masyarakat...*


An Nisaa’ 4:5

Dan janganlah kamu serahkan kepada orang-orang yang belum sempurna akalnya,
*harta* (mereka yang ada dalam kekuasaanmu) yang dijadikan Allah sebagai *pokok
kehidupan*. Berilah mereka belanja dan pakaian (dari hasil harta itu) dan
ucapkanlah kepada mereka kata-kata yang baik.



An Nahl 16:71

Dan Allah melebihkan sebahagian kamu dari sebahagian yang lain dalam hal
rezeki, tetapi *orang-orang yang dilebihkan (rezekinya itu) tidak mau
memberikan rezeki mereka* kepada budak-budak yang mereka miliki, *agar
mereka sama (merasakan) rezeki itu*. Maka mengapa mereka mengingkari nikmat
Allah?



Al Ahqaaf 46:20

Dan (ingatlah) hari (ketika) orang-orang kafir dihadapkan ke neraka (kepada
mereka dikatakan): *"Kamu telah menghabiskan rezekimu yang baik dalam
kehidupan duniawimu (saja) dan kamu telah bersenang-senang dengannya;* maka
*pada hari ini kamu dibalasi dengan azab yang menghinakan* karena kamu
telah menyombongkan diri di muka bumi tanpa hak dan karena kamu telah
fasik."



Faathir 35:29

*Sesungguhnya orang-orang yang selalu* membaca kitab Allah dan mendirikan
shalat dan *menafkahkan sebahagian dari rezeki yang Kami anugerahkan kepada
mereka* dengan diam-diam dan terang-terangan, *mereka itu mengharapkan
perniagaan yang tidak akan merugi,*



Ath Thalaaq 65:7

*Hendaklah orang yang mampu memberi nafkah menurut kemampuannya*. Dan orang
yang disempitkan rezekinya hendaklah memberi nafkah dari harta yang
diberikan Allah kepadanya. *Allah tidak memikulkan beban kepada seseorang
melainkan (sekedar) apa yang Allah berikan kepadanya*. Allah kelak akan
memberikan kelapangan sesudah kesempitan.



<http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2082506/Wealthy-elite-pay-tax-says-Clegg-calls-law-tax-avoidance.html?ITO=1490>

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2082506/Wealthy-elite-pay-tax-says-Clegg-calls-law-tax-avoidance.html?ITO=1490

'Wealthy elite' should pay more tax, say Cameron and Clegg as they push for
law against tax-avoidance

By Gavin 
Allen<http://www.dailymail.co.uk/home/search.html?s=&authornamef=Gavin+Allen>

Last updated at 3:24 PM on 5th January 2012

Read more:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2082506/Wealthy-elite-pay-tax-says-Clegg-calls-law-tax-avoidance.html#ixzz1ilKHCsK5

David Cameron and Nick Clegg have signaled their intent to increase the tax
burden on 'a wealthy elite who see tax as an optional extra'.

This morning Nick Clegg said that he would be urging Chancellor George
Osborne to introduce anti-avoidance measures in this year’s Budget.

Hours later, he was backed by the Prime Minister who called for a tougher
approach to large companies who use 'fancy corporate lawyers' to 'endlessly
reduce' their tax bills.
 [image: Taxing platform: David Cameron, pictured today at a Waitrose food
distribution center in Bracknell, has backed Nick Clegg's calls for a new
law on tax avoidance]

Taxing platform: David Cameron, pictured today at a Waitrose food
distribution center in Bracknell, has backed Nick Clegg's calls for a new
law on tax avoidance
 [image: Targeting the rich: Nick Clegg said he wants to see a general law
on tax-avoidance in 2012]

Targeting the rich: Nick Clegg said he wants to see a general law on
tax-avoidance in 2012

Mr Cameron said the Government was considering introducing a new power to
prevent tax avoidance by big firms and the wealthiest individuals.

Speaking to small and medium-sized business leaders - many of whom are
angry about forthcoming spot checks on their paperwork by HM Revenue and
Customs (HMRC) - Mr Cameron said that bigger companies had to pay their
'fair share'.
CLEGG INSISTS PM HADN'T PLANNED FOR EURO VETO

Nick Clegg has said again that he was not consulted over David Cameron's
use of the veto at December's European summit.

The Deputy Prime Minister said that, ahead of the summit, plans had been
made to ensure there was a proper single market and a level playing field
for financial services in Europe.

However, he said 'there appeared to have been no negotiation' on those
issues.

'I don't think anyone planned for the outcome that left Britain in a
position of one,' Mr Clegg told the Today programme.

'There was no real planning or discussion about the possibility of Britain
being in a corner on its own.

'The dangers are that other countries seek to do things in a way that is
not particularly helpful to us as a country and when we have not got a
proper influence or voice.

'I don't want to get into the twists and turns of what actually happened in
the dead of night (during the summit). The outcome was the outcome as I
learned after the event.'

 At his first PM Direct event of 2012, in Maidenhead, the Prime Minister
said HMRC had to collect in 'a fair and business-friendly way'.

'They have got to be thinking about being business-friendly to small
businesses' he said.

'With the large companies, that have the fancy corporate lawyers and the
rest of it, I think we need a tougher approach.

 More...

   - Half of the workshy would give up their benefits rather than get out
   of 
bed<http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2082356/Workshy-benefits-bed.html>
   - No strategy and very little energy: Ed Miliband is savaged by his own
   Labour guru
   
<http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2082396/Ed-Miliband-savaged-Labour-guru-Lord-Glasman.html>

 'One of the things that we are going to be looking at this year is whether
there should be a general anti-avoidance power that HMRC can use,
particularly with very wealthy individuals and with the bigger companies,
to make sure they pay their fair share.'

Mr Cameron said he had worked in 'corporate Britain' and knew how companies
'use the complexity of the tax and legal system to try and endlessly reduce
their tax payments'.

'Of course it’s right for companies to be able to plan and have
predictability and the rest of it, but they should be paying a fair tax
rate,” he added.

Following similar comments by the Chief Treasury Secretary Danny Alexander
in his New Year's message for his constituents, Mr Clegg this morning had
also called for tougher regulation on tax avoidance.

He raised the issue of a general law against tax-avoidance on which he said
he wanted to see some progress in Chancellor George Osborne's budget this
year.

  [image: New Year's message: Danny Alexander said those with the broadest
shoulders should bear the greatest tax burden]
 [image: Great expectations: The Lib Dems want action on tax avoidance in
Chancellor George Osborne's buget]

Great expectations: Danny Alexander, left, said those with the broadest
shoulders should bear the greatest tax burden, and the Lib Dems want to see
action on tax avoidance in George Osborne's budget in the Spring

He told Radio 4's Today programme: 'I think there are millions of people -
and these are people who the Liberal Democrats are in politics for - who
pay their taxes, who work hard, who aspire to do the right things for
themselves and their families, who are quite rightly angered there is a
wealthy elite of large businesses who can pay an army of tax accountants to
get out of paying their fair share of tax.

'They basically see paying tax as an optional extra, they pick and choose
the taxes you pay.

SO WHO EXACTLY ARE THE WEALTHY ELITE, NICK?

Nick Clegg fits into the 'wealthy elite' he wants to target.

The Deputy Prime Minister, who earns £134,565 a year, is married to a
high-flying City lawyer, Miriam Gonzalez Durantez.

He enjoyed a privileged upbringing and was educated at the finest
institutions in the country.

Mr Clegg attended London's Westminster School, now charging £19,000 a year,
before taking a gap year as a skiing instructor in Austria.

He then studied social anthropology at Robinson College, Cambridge.

'That's why I insisted we write into the coalition agreement, as we did
when we started the Government 18 months ago, that we clamp down on tax
avoidance, including working up long-standing Liberal Democrat ideas - for
instance, to apply a new general anti-avoidance rule.

'There should be a general rule that you can't play the system, you can't
abuse the system.

'We have received a report from an expert, Graham Aaronson, who has
provided a report to the Treasury, that says what he calls an anti-abuse
rule is feasible.

'I very much hope, and I'm not going to write George Osborne's budget, we
can make progress on that in the budget. We have got to make sure the tax
system is fair.'

Mr Clegg said the overall goal was to rebalance the tax system away from
taxation on work and earnings towards taxing unearned wealth, but refused
to comment specifically about the possibility of a 'mansion tax'.

The tax, backed by Vince Cable, would target homes worth more than
£2million and was advocated by the party at the general election in 2010.

'Our cornerstone commitment is to make the tax system fairer by lifting the
point at which you start paying income tax,' he said.

'I will continue to advocate a system as a Liberal Democrat where you have
a lower burden on work and enterprise and a higher burden of tax on wealth.

'I think we have a tax system that is unbalanced.'

Read more:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2082506/Wealthy-elite-pay-tax-says-Clegg-calls-law-tax-avoidance.html#ixzz1ilKMxWG0
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