Funds Insider - Opening the door to funds

Welcome to the Citywire Funds Insider Forums, where members share investment ideas and discuss everything to do with their money.

You'll need to log in or set up an account to start new discussions or reply to existing ones. See you inside!

Notification

Icon
Error

Big pension problem looming?
Dennis .
Posted: 12 April 2011 19:58:32(UTC)
#1

Joined: 26/12/2007(UTC)
Posts: 1,018

You may have noticed that the Chancellor recently stated that he was looking to merge National Insurance payments into general taxation and that work was being carried out to look at the issues surrounding such a move. One thing that struck me about this is that it will inevitably cause a rise in the basic rate of tax. We will therefore be faced with a situation where people are currently putting money into pension schemes now and getting an uplift based on their marginal tax rate of say 20% but could be taking out in later life a pension which will be taxed at a higher rate. Can this make sense? Perhaps the only route forward is ISAs.
P L
Posted: 13 April 2011 08:03:07(UTC)
#2

Joined: 10/08/2008(UTC)
Posts: 356

What you say has always been the case to some extent given the whole point behind giving tax relief at the highest rate was on the principle of deferred taxation ie by being responsible and not spending today but saving for when you retire the government would let you keep all the investment return and then pay back the deferred tax in the form of income tax.

Which is why when I hear the arguments about its unfair how some people get 40% whilst others only 20% I get annoyed - they get as a loan in effect to persude them not to spend it all today to avoid the state having to keep them tommorrow. Obviously some people by becoming basic rate tax payers can pull a fast one.

The problem we have is over the years governments have got into the habit of tinkering and tweaking with everything constantly. We are now at the point at which you can't really trust that in 30yrs time having locked away your saving that the rules will be the same. Trouble is no one in HMG seems to see that as a problem.

A the end of the day if the carrot is not tasty enough no one will bother. The obvious risk is that having forced a migration to other more flexible forms of saving the money is all spent (or given away) before you retire.

In theory given the technology available there is no reason why the exact amount of deferred tax couldn't be recorded annually and accurately so you pay back what is actually due to HMRC irrespective of the tax rate at the time you pay in or take out.


Stanley Spencer
Posted: 13 April 2011 13:39:55(UTC)
#3

Joined: 10/02/2010(UTC)
Posts: 8

The merger of tax and NI payments could have a big effect upon the amount of tax paid by the retired - they don't currently pay NI. Whilst at first sight this might appear unfair it could lead to a fairer situation with regard to health care or ,indeed, improve the level of resourcing in the nhs for the elderly. The elephant in the room as far as the middle group of elderly people is not things like IHT but whether or not there will be anything left for inheritance after care fees etc have been paid. For those with little or no resources they are being subsidised by the taxpayer and excessive care charges for self funders. A few hundred thousand may be a lot of money for a millionaire but they currently would leave a sizeable amount.

stan
snoekie
Posted: 13 April 2011 16:09:29(UTC)
#4

Joined: 26/08/2008(UTC)
Posts: 132

Stanley has a point about the retired having to continue to make NH contributions, and that must then mean as this is a form of insurance, ongoing, the treatments and drigs are being paid for and must be available, no excuses.

If that is to be the case the taxpaying threshold for the retired must be raised and IHT reduced, ideally abolished, because the money/assets has/have already been taxed, except possibly in the case of pension pots. Mind you, given the actions of Zanuliebore, and those just retired/retiring with pension pots having been penally taxed so tyhose pots should be totally exempt and those passing the legislation should have their pensions dramatically reduced, halved, just as they did for those they were supposed to be looking after.

That is after proceedings for incompetence and damages awarded to those that suffered against Bliar/Brown et al (Bliar because of his pact not to interfere with Browns tax raising and expenditure- a dereliction/adication of his obligations to be the leader and curb and control the excesses of Brown/Balls excesses)and also the opposition for failure to discharge their obligations.

That also means that the public service pensions must also be halved, for the higher paid, say above £50k.

Money for this could easily be raised for these by opting out of the EU payments/freeing up bureaucracy/requirements/taxes imposed by/as a result of the EU of which landfill is just a start. Bye bye the obligation to support the bail outs of the feckless countries in the Euro, including to the French farmers/Spanish fishing fleet.
Ian Grumpy
Posted: 13 April 2011 16:56:50(UTC)
#5

Joined: 14/01/2009(UTC)
Posts: 63

The issue of the retired is the reason why Nigel Lawson and Ken Clarke both decided that the merging of Income Tax and NI were too difficult and left them alone,
snoekie
Posted: 13 April 2011 17:53:03(UTC)
#6

Joined: 26/08/2008(UTC)
Posts: 132

Ian, good point, fools rush in?
Ian W
Posted: 13 April 2011 20:17:39(UTC)
#7

Joined: 05/01/2007(UTC)
Posts: 6

When Osbourne gave his buget addeess he specifically stated it was NOT his inention to raise the tax rate paid by pensioners or on savings interest, rather than merge the NI And Income Tax the aim was to harmonise the thresholds etc to make them easier for employers and HMRC.
He also made clear that the contributory principle of NI would be kept and that " tax simplification " was not intended to be anything but revenue neutral, certainly not tax raising!
Don't take my word for it though:
" However, he said that this will not include extending NI to pensioners or other forms of income, or the abolition of the contributory principle. Tax experts have said that a full merger of the systems is highly unlikely."
: http://www.accountancyag...ax-merger#ixzz1JQrSuBDl
Accountancy Age
Dennis .
Posted: 13 April 2011 23:50:21(UTC)
#8

Joined: 26/12/2007(UTC)
Posts: 1,018

I think this discussion has gone off topic a little. The issue is not about fair tax rates for pensioners if income tax and NI are merged. It's about the fact that if you invest in a pension you want the tax rate on withdrawal to be no higher than when you put contributions in otherwise you might be better off not saving this way.

From my own experience I can recall putting contributions in when the top tax rate was 60% in the 1980's, I am now a basic rate pensioner. For me it worked well.
P L
Posted: 14 April 2011 08:05:55(UTC)
#9

Joined: 10/08/2008(UTC)
Posts: 356

The main problem is NI has been used as a stealth tax for years and not as an insurance policy to fund healthcare / retirement etc. which is what is assumed by most people. Having spent the member contributions rather than investing them to increase the value they are now faced with the prospect of having to come clean - if HMG was an insurance company they would have been closed down years ago for misselling and fraud.
Anonymous Post
Posted: 14 April 2011 11:36:25(UTC)
#10
Anonymous 1 needed this 'Off the Record'

As usual the contributors to Citywire are following the Daily Mail level of discussion, this is not about NI as a stealth tax! It's about whether pensions are potentially no longer worth the risk of contributing if the basic rate of tax has to increase.
2 Pages12Next page
+ Reply to discussion

Markets

Other markets