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Can Reeves get her money back by taxing our pensions?

 

For the first time in a while I have good things to say about the Telegraph’s reporting on pensions. Rob White is right to point out that with restrictions on raising income tax, the Chancellor might choose to go for the taxation of our later life income – our pensions.


Reducing the cost of pension tax relief today

It points to a statement when in opposition from Rachel Reeves where she proposed a flat rate of taxation, the Telegraph do a spot poll of whether we’d go for a generous 33% flat rate. 42,453 readers have voted. I thought that 33% tax relief would bring out the “yes vote” and it has – me included! I think that 33% flat won’t save much money though!

But it gets better with comment from Callum Cooper of Hymans, whose paper is well known to readers.

Calum

agreed that a flat rate of tax relief was one place the Chancellor was likely to look, but warned it came with political risks.

He said: “An alternative that’s gaining quiet traction in policy circles is a shift in the timing of tax relief. Under a new system, individuals could contribute out of post-tax income and receive a government top-up, with pensions then exempt from income tax on withdrawal.

“The effect is fiscally similar and has no impact on take-home pay or take-home pensions, but it provides the Treasury with £22bn-plus more cash to invest in the short term by taxing income now rather than later.”

Thanks Calum and the Telegraph for promoting an idea that I would vote for if I was voting.


Taking aim at tax-free cash – good idea.

Means test our capacity to take tax-free cash from our pensions? I chose not to take tax free cash from my defined benefit scheme because I would have been ripped off by the trustee’s conversion factors, but it’s simpler with DC where you simply cap the amount of the pot that can be paid as cash at 25% or an amount of money – say £100,000 (capping anyone with more than £400,000 saved).

Rob Morgan, of investment manager  at Charles Stanley, said:

“I have a niggling concern that the tax-free cash limit is, operationally, a lever that’s quite easy to pull.

“There is the potential to set a higher or lower cash limit fairly easily and target those with larger pension pots without disturbing the ‘25pc tax-free cash for most people’ narrative.

“If the tax-free cash limit stays frozen, this would provide another example of the fiscal drag that governments are so fond of and it would raise some extra revenue. But it could also be reduced by any politician looking in envy at the amount being released tax-free from defined contribution pots.”

I don’t know many people in DB schemes (politicians still are) who look at those in DC schemes with “envy”.  I think they are enjoying the prospect of a lifetime income as I am, from a DB plan. I think means testing the tax-free cash is a very good idea, it has already been done once (£268,275)  and I hope it is done again.


“Decimating” Salary Sacrifice

Decimating means kill one in ten or make it hard for the rest to carry on – not quite the right word but banning salary sacrifice would leave a proportion of savers saving less and those who don’t get switched back to employee contributions wondering why their pay packet is a little lighter. Here are the numbers

National insurance is the new income tax and salary sacrificing is weird because it most helpful for those on low to average incomes. I don’t think that salary sacrifice will be taken away from those on such incomes, but I can see higher earners facing obstacles.

I’d like to see a nuanced version here to enable those not paying higher rate tax but paying a lot of national insurance to get the maximum benefit of NI sacrifice. So it’s a half in , half out approval from me.


Shrinking the pensions annual allowance

Currently, savers can put up to £60,000 or their annual salary, whichever is higher, into their pension each year before facing a tax charge. They can also take advantage of any unused allowance from the previous three tax years.

However, it was only £40,000 as recently as 2023 before then-chancellor Jeremy Hunt increased it.

Rob Morgan of Charles Stanley told the Telegraph that one alternative to restricting salary sacrifice would be tightening the annual allowance or carry forward rules – or both.

He added:

“Carry forward is much used by those with lumpy earnings from year to year or have a need to ‘catch up’ on their pension savings – and it could be devastating for a small minority.

“However, one suspects that it could be one of those incisively targeted moves that isn’t beyond the realm of possibility.”

Andrew Tully, of Nucleus Financial, said:

“Such a change may also impact the ability or willingness of some public sector workers, such as senior doctors, to take on additional work.”

You can tell the kind of providers who are concerned here – it is the SIPP providers, or “wealth managers”. Frankly, if you are getting more than £40,000 paid into your SIPP, workplace pension or funded or unfunded DB pension plan, you need to be feeling vulnerable to Rachel Reeves and I’m on her side not yours!


Hitting employers with a second National Insurance raid

In the Budget, businesses were hit with a £25bn tax grab through an increase in National Insurance contributions for staff.

The hike, from 13.8pc to 15pc, has already led to a seven-year low in job vacancies outside the pandemic, while data has also suggested it marked the death of the pay rise.

However, the Chancellor could go one step further and charge employers National Insurance on their pension contributions. According to the Institute for Fiscal Studies, this could raise £17bn.

Andrew  Tully said:

“This is a tax on employers so it may be less obvious to employees, although the impact is likely to hit employees in terms of lower pension contributions or lower salaries if employer costs rise.

“It will also have a negative impact on growth if employer costs grow, so it may not be attractive to a Government which is putting UK growth front and centre of its strategy.”

Andrew Tully is on the mark, the impact on employers who employ large numbers does not nee a pension tax on contributions.


Well done the Telegraph, Rachel Reeves and Torsten Bell (oops!)

Taxation of pension contributions and benefits  is a popular area of speculation amongst financial journalists and this speculation is probably as good as you are going to get right now.

There are of course many other areas where pensions benefit and are taxed,  funded pensions are  impacted by exemptions and levies on investments. Let’s not suppose that the sums for the Chancellor are as simple as contribution and payment taxes.

But I enjoyed seeing all the speculation martialled together in a single article and happy to include my thoughts which have been aligned with Torsten Bell’s and Rachel Reeves’ – so far.

A fuller picture

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