Site icon AgeWage: Making your money work as hard as you do

“Fair” will have to wait – how this Government fluffed pension tax-reform.

 

In April 2015 George Osborne announced a root and branch reform review of tax-relief

We expected more in the Autumn Statement that year- nothing came

We expected an announcement in the budget 2016, instead we got a deferral a few weeks before.

The Brexit vote came and went, George Osborne and David Cameron went.

We got a new Prime Minister who pledged to be on the side of those just getting by.

Instead of reform we got more austerity. In the name of Brexit we had another election; instead of being stronger, the Government got weaker.

At the beginning of the week, David Gaunt, the new Secretary of State for the DWP wrote in the FT that  he would not shy away from the hard pension decisions; but when pressed on what was happening to the long promised radical reform of the pension taxation system, he told the ABI conference the very next day he “saw no particular consensus emerging” for a new form of tax-relief.

So the Government have kicked one of the key planks of social reform into the long grass, on the basis that not enough of us can agree. I can think of no worse abdication of responsibility than this.

For the people who are the losers have not been consulted, the decisions have been taken by a handful of back-benchers who have spoken out of vested interest both for their own finances and for those of the privileged minority of voters who have higher rate tax to lose.

Is this what Theresa May meant when she stood outside Number 10 Downing Street and stood up for the common people? Was she really saying she’d perpetuate the totally ridiculous pension taxation system that redistributes money from the poor to the rich?

Putting aside her shambolic inability to lead through the election, can we today see any coherent thrust to social policy in this Government? I would suggest that a Government that considers making policy by means of “particular consensus” is one that has lost its mojo. This Government, only a few weeks old, is showing “no particular sense of leadership”, in fact it is failing the very people it set out to help- and doing so in the most wimpiest of fashions.

I have nothing against David Gauke, Gregg McClymont – who I take as a guide in these matters- considers Gauke a good guy, alongside Richard Harrington and Simon Kirby – a triumvirate of good guys. So I won’t jibe him personally.


Called to account?

Just because we have a new shade of blue in Government, does not mean that previous promises cannot be kept. Apart from the fundamental unfairness of the tax perks given to incentivise contributions, there are particular nonsenses, that because of the failure to get to grips with the big picture- will persist.

Pension tax-relief is a wholly unjustifiable rich man’s perk which diverts money from providing universal benefits to provide a minority of already rich people with wrappers for wealth preservation.

The pension freedoms are being used by the wealthy for all kinds of wealth management while those at the other end of the scale are being left to fend for themselves with little more than Pension Wise to guide them.

It is time we acknowledged that those just getting by are not being helped but being abused by this state of affairs.

If I had been at the ABI conference, I would have asked David Gauke how the maintenance of the current pensions system could be squared with any coherent policy on social justice.

I wasn’t at the ABI conference, and I suspect you can guess why!

 

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