R E L A T E D   C O N T E N T
ADVERTISEMENT

Shot with the stupid gun: was Darling just playing to the gallery when he taxed rich people's pensions?

Anthony Harrington, Financial Director, 25 May 2009

Slapping even more tax on rich people’s pensions is going to result in less revenue for the Treasury, not more. The Chancellor is taking careful aim at both feet and pulling the trigger.

When Alistair Darling announced in his 2009 Budget that he would be depriving those earning £150,000 or more of certain tax advantages associated with their pension contributions he said, by way of justification: “It is only right that those who caused the downturn should bear more of the costs.”

On one level, this was simply playing to the gallery, since even Darling has to know that not every high earner in Britain is a banker. (In fact, the headhunters we spoke to suggest that up to three-quarters of their £150k-plus vacancies are outside of financial services.) On another level, it exposed the fact that the move to hit the pensions of high earners was pure political expediency and an attempt to milk the public furore over the outlandish £700,000 annual pension accorded to former Royal Bank of Scotland chief Sir Fred Goodwin.

What many missed is the fact that a pension on this scale requires a pension pot far above the 2009-10 £1.75m lifetime limit and is, therefore, wildly tax inefficient. As such, it would generate tremendous revenue for the Chancellor in punitive taxes. In a rational world, the Chancellor would want every top executive to seek such a pension, since the additional taxes raised would greatly ease the national debt.

It is almost impossible to find any pensions expert who has anything positive or kindly to say about Darling’s wheeze ­ other than the odd, honest admission that it plays wonderfully for the advisory community.

Well advised
There is no doubt that it puts those who can most afford pensions advice deeply in need of that advice. In a bleak economic downturn, Darling has tossed them a particularly tasty bone and given them a wonderful reason to tighten their links with the country’s richest people.

Gary Heynes, tax partner and head of private clients at Baker Tilly points out that even higher earners need to be providing for their future and the proposed changes are “a huge disincentive for anyone earning over £150,000 to put their money into a pension.”

Instead, he suggests, vehicles such as the Enterprise Investment Scheme (EIS) ­ despite the high level of risk ­ will be seen as a more tax-efficient, mid-term savings vehicle.

“EIS now has a threshold of £500,000 which attracts an immediate 20% tax relief and you can defer Capital Gains Tax from other investments, which is worth a further 18% on top of the 20%,” he says. The alternative is a venture capital trust which attracts 30% tax relief.

Heynes says the legislation introduces “huge complexity” into the tax legislation. “The forestalling rules (meant to prevent individuals from loading their pension contributions before the new rules come into effect in 2011) are very complex and quite draconian.

Moreover, this is on a self-assessment basis, so if you get it wrong, woe betide you,” he warns.

Marc Hommel, pensions partner at PricewaterhouseCoopers, says many high earners will find the value of remaining in a pension scheme has become marginal. Others will find that it has actually become negative. “A major unintended consequence of the change, from the government’s perspective, is that as high earners stop going for pensions for themselves, they will lose the motivation to support workplace pensions.”

This, in turn, would not just accelerate the closure of final salary schemes, but would impact defined contribution schemes as well.

“A lot of organisations will be re-evaluating their overall strategy for rewarding people.

The end result is that we will probably see personal accounts becoming an outsourced way of meeting the government’s auto enrolment requirements. I expect to see organisations becoming more creative in how they structure employee reward schemes with pensions playing a much smaller role,” he says

KPMG pensions partner Lee Jagger also warns that the government could find the law of unintended consequences coming into play as a result of the changes it has introduced to high-earner pensions. At present, a range of normal corporate activities, including promoting executives and allowing early retirement, could trigger tax liabilities under the proposals.

“Employers will face a raft of questions from their high-earning employees and they will need to get their heads around the new rules very quickly,” he says.

One of the most critical points about the changes introduced by the Budget was made by Stephen Haddrill, director general of the Association of British Insurers, immediately after the Budget. Haddrill warned that the Chancellor “had sent an alarming message that [the government’s] pension promises can be easily broken.”

Proposed changes
• Restricted tax relief on pension contributions for those earning above £150,000 a year
• No tax relief for those earning more than £180,000 a year
• New regime to be effective from 2011
• Anti-avoidance measures to prevent front-loading of pension contributions to 2011


  • Have your say
  • Send to a friend
  • Share
  • Print

Comments

ADVERTISEMENT
M A R K E T P L A C E
Sponsored links
| Goodman Masson
A FTSE financial services firm require an experienced Group Accountant with experience of consolidations of over 100 legal entities. The consolidation is done through Excel and requires alot of work around inter-company eliminations. There are ... more >
| Marks Sattin
Exciting opportunity to drive a growing Foods business forward in its drive to expand. The client is in the forefront drive of the organic and high quality foods market with their desire to source only ... more >
| Marks Sattin
My client is looking to strengthen their Business Intelligence team with a Cognos Business Intelligence Manager to support the wider application and development of Cognos and other reporting packages. You will be leading a small ... more >
| Marks Sattin
A renowned city bank is looking for a compliance officer to work with the regulatory risk and compliance team for an initial 6 month period. The role consists of: > Daily monitoring of equity proprietary ... more >
More Jobs in Finance
ADVERTISEMENT
Job zone
Job of the week
Related jobs
Search for a job
 
> More Financial Director jobs
ADVERTISEMENT