Tax
Unintended consequences of pensions tax relief restrictions |
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| Tax | |
| Written by Paul Williams | |
| Wednesday, 25 August 2010 | |
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HM Treasury desire to prevent abuse of system will affect ordinary members of the working population. Investment consultants have expressed concern that early retirement or ill-health, promotions or redundancy will expose employees whose pay is only slightly higher than average to tax liabilities intended for high earners. Mercer has outlined its solutions to HM Treasury’s concerns on tax avoidance situations arising from its proposals on high earners’ pension tax relief and efforts to encourage greater flexibility in scheme design and reduce opportunities to abuse the system are supported. There are concerns however that the current proposals are inflexible, will excessively restrict the UK’s working practices and have unintended financial consequences for ordinary members of the working population – not just high earners. As part of its consultation process, the Treasury has asked for suggestions on handling events that could provide opportunities for people to avoid tax charges resulting from the proposed tax changes. These events are: larger than expected salary increases, enhanced benefits on redundancy and early retirement. "We support the rationale behind HM Treasury’s plans to restrict the tax relief available on pension saving," commented Dr Deborah Cooper, Head of Mercer’s Retirement Research Group. "However, the current proposals could restrict the development of flexible working practices in the UK as well as having severe financial implications for a wide range of employees and not just those who are the target of this tax," she said. RedundancyRedundant employees are often compensated with a combination of increased cash and pension benefits. Under HM Treasury’s proposals, this would prompt a "double tax hit" both on the redundancy payment – if it is more than the statutory amount – and the pension contributions. Suppose that a 55-year old man earning £45,000 is made redundant from the job he has held for 20 years. He has been accruing his pension at 1/60th a year so has built up a pension of £15,000 a year. Part of his redundancy agreement is that his pension can be payable immediately with no reduction. Supposing HM Treasury used a factor of 15 to value DB accrual where payment is from age 65, and 25 to value accrual paid immediately from age 55. With an annual allowance of £40,000 the redundant employee would be subject to a pension tax bill of £44,000. "This is clearly not right or fair," suggested Cooper. "If an employer is trying to do the right thing by its employees, government proposals mean that the taxation of these enhancements will make it financially unviable for an employee to receive benefits at a time when they need them most." "To avoid abuse, a possible solution would be that, if the redundancy terms apply to a certain number or category of employees, the potential tax on any enhanced benefit should be waived," she said. Early retirement or ill health retirementAgain, suppose a 45 year old woman has been in her £45,000 a year job for 15 years and intends to retire at 65, but is suddenly forced into early retirement due to ill health. She has been accruing her pension at the rate of 1/60th and currently can expect £11,250 a year. Her pension scheme grants an ill-health pension that bases payment on service to her normal retirement age, giving her the larger amount of £26,250 a year. In this case we assume an annual allowance of £40,000 as before, but use a single flat rate factor of 17.5. This employee will be caught by the current HM Treasury proposals and could face a demand for £89,000 in tax – more than three times her pension. In the case of early retirement (or ill-health retirement), Mercer believes that if an employer, for a number of years, has an established and pre-funded working practice of allowing staff to retire early or for reasons of ill-health, no additional tax should be applied. Instead it is expected that the factor used to test against the annual allowance would take the scheme’s normal practice into account. "Where early retirement is a more discretionary option," said Cooper, "we agree that the employees benefiting from this enhancement should, where necessary, pay the appropriate tax charge." Greater than average salary growthHM Treasury is also concerned about scope for abuse due to substantial salary rises, which could arise following a promotion. However, provided the factor used to evaluate DB accrual is designed appropriately, Cooper believes that this is the least problematic area of the three. "Provided the regime is sensitively designed, with age-related factors including an allowance for future salary growth, the number of people caught by this is likely to be small so the information requirements will not be onerous," she said. "In any case we would expect many schemes to amend their scheme design such that the impact of any large salary increases is smoothed over time, reducing the circumstances in which an Annual Allowance charge would apply,” concluded Cooper. |
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