Bus fares up to 75p per mile (Trowbridge to Melksham single) and train fares up to 86p per mile (Melksham to Paddington single). And yet the taxman only allows you to claim 45p per mile, dropping to 25p per mile after 10,000 miles when you use your own vehicle.
Transport as a service - Jeremy Corbyn suggsted this week that bus fares should be capped at the same rate that HMRC uses for private vehicle mileage claims, and perhaps that idea has some merit in keeping the cost of transport to manageable levels. For sure, "ooze gonna pay4 it?", but wasn't something similar done in Victorian times, with a fare not to exceed 1d per mile on at least on train per day on all lines?
Currently, HMRC states that you can claim 45p per mile (up to 10,000 miles, after which the rate drops to 25p) if you drive a car or a van, 24p for a motorcycle and 20p for a bicycle. If your employer pays you less than this, you can get your tax back on the difference.
Jeremy will sort it once he's elected, everything will be nationalised, trains, buses, whatever you want, you can have it and we will move forward into broad, sunlit, uplands with equally broad smiles on our faces.
(oooooooooo Jeremy Corbyn.........ooooooooooos gunna pay for it?)
