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QEF8DD wrote:I intend to use Jan 1 to Dec 31 2008 as my past earning period.
For proof of earnings, I will submit the bank statement and letter (both signed and stamped) + signed and stamped sal slips from my company- nothing else (no letter from employer etc as they don't do it).
I was in UK for a major part of 2008. The UK daily allowance I received is reflected in my Indian sal slips as a foreign component (converted in INR).I do not have any payslips in GBP to present to VFS. Is it OK to submit the Indian payslips with the comment in the covering letter that I was actually in UK during this time? I am not using uplift for this period so am not doing anything wrong to get extra points but not sure how exactly to present this to VFS so that they do not suspect that I am hiding anything.
QEF8DD wrote:Thanks raghu.. The only problem I now have is that I don't know which exchange rate to use - that for Dec 31 or that for July 1 (till when I was in UK).
I am confused because as per the guidelines '...closing spot exchange rate on the OANDA website on the last day of the period for which he/she has claimed earnings in that currency'. In my case, the currency is the same (INR) for the full 12 months, but country of earnings differ. While filling the online points calculator, I have to put in a exchange rate for the Jan-July period, but I cannot use Dec 31 rate right ? Am in a fix now.
I had asked the same question earlier in another post but no one replied perhaps cuz noone understood my case properly. Now, at least you know what I am talking about. I am going to VFS tomorrow, but I better not ask this question as I might get some fancy reply..
The tier1 guidance does not clearly state whether daily allowances are part of earnings, however allowances in general (such as accommodation, schooling or car allowances) are treated as earnings (Page 21, Point 110). whether or not these are part of earnings, I cannot show the DA as I have no statements with me.raghu0307 wrote:
The answer to that is , you were being paid daily allowance which is not called "earning in UK"
You were having the salary paid to your account in India during that period when you were in UK . Is that right. If yes, then even when you were in UK you were paying taxes in India earning Indian salary and not the UKsalary.
Since your salary was being credited to your account in India, this is Indian salary which makes the entire welve months of your earning to be Indian salary.
Therefore no need to take two parts and two different exchange rates.
You will just need to take one exchange rate that is on the last date of the period you are claiming for.
DA can be used as long as it is not a reimbursement of actual expenses incurred by you and is reflected on your salary slip. For example if you go to a clients office on a daily basis and the company reimburses you the expenses incurred towards travel based on you filing travel tickets etc. then it would not be included in your Gross Earnings.QEF8DD wrote:The tier1 guidance does not clearly state whether daily allowances are part of earnings, however allowances in general (such as accommodation, schooling or car allowances) are treated as earnings (Page 21, Point 110). whether or not these are part of earnings, I cannot show the DA as I have no statements with me.raghu0307 wrote:
The answer to that is , you were being paid daily allowance which is not called "earning in UK"
You were having the salary paid to your account in India during that period when you were in UK . Is that right. If yes, then even when you were in UK you were paying taxes in India earning Indian salary and not the UKsalary.
Since your salary was being credited to your account in India, this is Indian salary which makes the entire welve months of your earning to be Indian salary.
Therefore no need to take two parts and two different exchange rates.
You will just need to take one exchange rate that is on the last date of the period you are claiming for.
I will explain a bit more.. When I was in UK, the Indian sal slip had a foreign component in earnings column. The tax on this foreign equivalent amount was also mentioned in the earnings column. In deductions, this earning and the tax was mentioned again, because company was paying the tax on the foreign component. The result was that the net salary was the same as what I would receive if I were working in India though the gross was high.
At this point, I think I have to present an example to be clear. Please see below. (I am not able to preserver the spaces for some reason).
Description Earnings Deductions
BASIC 21766.0 0.0
HRA 9780.0 0.0
ADDITIONAL HRA 2177.0 0.0
Conveyance 900.0 0.0
Flat Allowance 12000.0 0.0
Foreign Increase101403.0 0.0
Gross Tax 52215.0 0.0
PF Deduction 0.0 2612.0
Foreign Increase
Remittance 0.0 101403.0
Gross Up Tax 0.0 52215.0
INCOME TAX 0.0 6264.0
Total 200141.0 -162494.0
Net 37647
raghu0307:raghu0307 wrote: Since your salary was being credited to your account in India, this is Indian salary which makes the entire welve months of your earning to be Indian salary.
Therefore no need to take two parts and two different exchange rates.
You will just need to take one exchange rate that is on the last date of the period you are claiming for.
QEF8DD wrote:raghu0307:raghu0307 wrote: Since your salary was being credited to your account in India, this is Indian salary which makes the entire welve months of your earning to be Indian salary.
Therefore no need to take two parts and two different exchange rates.
You will just need to take one exchange rate that is on the last date of the period you are claiming for.
Unfortunately, the points calculator forces me to enter the country of earning and hence I have two parts for my claim period each of which require an exchange rate to be mentioned (Based on the country of earnings, the uplift is automatically calculated by the points calculator)... Hence the confusion !!
Forum members: I regret updating this post frequently and vehemently but I really want to submit my tier1 early next week. Have been dilly-dallying with the application for some time now.
With an Indian salary slip I am not sure how you can claim to be earning in UK or your country of earnings to be UK.QEF8DD wrote:dear raghu0307,
I fully understand your view, but the thing is that the guidance does not state one should actually be paying taxes to claim earnings in a particular country. In middle-east, there is no tax at all !!
Anyone entering UK on work doesnt mean that they earn in UK. People mostly go onsite on per diem basis. Some companies add it as a taxable componen in Tax calculations for varying reasons.I think I definitely need to enter the country of earning as UK because I am presenting wrong information otherwise. BHC would know when all I went and left the UK from the passport immigration stamps anyway.
It doesn't really matter whether I mention 31st Dec's or 1st Julys Oanda rate. I am getting the same number of points anyway. The point is whether the entry officer is convinced of what/why I did it (when its not mentioned in the guidance !!). I will send an email to the BHC tomorrow -but they seem to be slow in responding. I really appreciate your feedbacks to the post
Send an email to HO and show the response to the VFS guy. In any case VFS does not make decision on your application.QEF8DD wrote:Went to VFS office today. Upon asking, the tier1 person accepting submissions again told me today that the exchange rate to use while claiming previous earnings should be the most recent i.e. the day you submit your application or a day earlier. He told me that this question was asked by many applicants and so they had confirmed it with BHC.. i told him that the guidance doesn't state so and how can I follow a verbal confirmation. he told me i was looking at tier1 guidance for applicants within the UK and that i should check INF21 guidance.... the inf21 guidance (i guess http://www.ukvisas.gov.uk/en/howtoapply ... ralmigrant is the one) does not state anything on exchange rates and moreover it also states that 'More comprehensive guidance is available on the UK Border Agency website, which is the definitive version, and in the event of any discrepancy overrules the information provided in this leaflet. '!!.
Am going to start a new post asking VFS delhi November-December applicants to confirm what exchange rate they used and whether they have received their visa yet !!