Well back from my holidays and time to catch up with what’s been happening in the wacky world of pensions! The ‘honeymoon’ period of our current Coalition Government seems well and truly over and as we approach Conference season, the militants are flexing their muscles. Despite a new offer to their members, the BBC pension arrangements look set to provoke a strike by members of Unite and BECTU leading to the blacking out of the Conservative Meetfest.
Posts Tagged ‘retirement’
When I’m 64…er 75…
This week some interesting developments on the pension front and in particular the issue of a Consultation document by the Treasury on Compulsory Annuitisation by age 75. As many readers will know, the Government has already announced plans to scrap the Default Retirement Age requirements and so the need to review the requirement to purchase an annuity by age 75 when (in theory) you might still be actively working had to be on the cards.
The current tax rules were drafted on the premise that tax relief is given on the contributions going into a pension scheme on the assumption that tax will be paid on the income (or pension) derived from those contributions – that is on the benefits being paid.
At least we’re not French…
Well, I really don’t know where to start this week. Retirement ages to go up to 66 from 2016 – an accelerated rate but perhaps not before time. Default retirement age is to go – this was well trailed and was a neccesity if State Pension Ages are rising. But there is a downside to this of course. And that is – just where are the jobs going to come a) for the over 50s who are already struggling to find jobs in the current market and b) for the younger generation who might find their job opportunties blocked by encumbent older workers who won’t (or can’t) retire?
Who’d have thought it…?
Although it is really something of a statement of the bleedin’ obvious, PwC have recently issued a report which after extensive (and no doubt extremely expensive) research has concluded that Final Salary Pension Schemes will have ceased to exist within 10 years. This is not exactly ground breaking news to those of us within the Pension Industry who have been watching the death throes for several years now.
That’s Fuggin Brilliant…
Best news story of the week has to be Mohammed Fayed’s rant at the Harrods Pension Scheme Trustees for not allowing him to ‘raid’ the scheme of his company dividend before paying up for the deficit as the law requires. The full report in the Evening Standard is simply hilarious. I was convinced at first that it had been written by Ian Hislop. The shareholdings in Harrods are opaque in the extreme as any reader of Private Eye will know, with various offshore ‘Fayed Family Trusts’ hiding most of the true picture.
Robbing Peter to pay Paul…
This weeks’ items – another massive bailout (potentially) and a oopsie by a pension industry ‘good guy’
First, the Coalition Government has announced it’s intention to sell off part of the Royal Mail. So far so predictable. The kicker in this particular tale is that the Royal Mail is currently sitting on an £8BILLION (yes you read that correctly, £8 BILLION!!!) deficit and that’s just what’s been revealed in the company accounts. The Actuarial Valuation results due soon are expected to show an even bigger deficit. This will not ordinarily make it a particularly attractive proposition for any potential buyer.
You can’t take it with you
Right, as we are still (as of 5th May) deep into election territory, this weeks little homily is again covering some real law.
This one comes courtesy of the First Tier Tax Tribunal and concerns the case of Fryer and Ors v HMRC and which seems to be saying that if you don’t take your pension when it is due to you, then you (or your estate) will be liable to Inheritence Tax – a situation that most practioners thought the tax man wouldn’t claim.
A miscellany of news
A couple of bits and pieces this week to blog about. First the recent decision of the European Court of Human Rights dismissing an appeal by expat pensioners that they had been discriminated against because their pensions had not been increased in the same way as pensioners who remained in the UK.
Pots, Kettles, Black…
In the past, most of my blogs have been about the sorry state of the Defined Benefit pension scheme and its probable inevitable demise at the hands of poor regulation, economic circumstance and Government interference.
I thought this week then, it was time to look at the bright new future (which for these purposes is not the dreadful NEST) but the Defined Contribution or Money Purchase Scheme. This has for some time been the option of choice for employers who want to be seen to provide a decent workplace pension arrangement but without the downsides of costs and deficits which can grow to the size of the gross domestic product of a small country!!
Closing the Stable Door
So yet another Defined Benefit Scheme closes to future accrual. The Alliance Boots Scheme has announced that it too is joining the exodus from excellent, albeit unaffordable, pension provision into the less risky (from the employers perspective that is) Defined Contribution arena.
Really we should not continue to be surprised every time a ‘household name’ takes this decision. It is as inevitable as the Brits losing at every sport they turn their hands too (except maybe cricket on a good day or snooker but the first is boring and the latter not really a sport at all – and is boring – hm, I detect a pattern developing…)
Jennie advises large multi-employer schemes as well as smaller single employer arrangements and has wide experience of both Defined Contribution and Defined Benefit schemes. Jennie qualified in 1986 originally as a criminal prosecutor. She sits as a Magistrate in her local justice area and is an Approved Chairman and Deputy Chair of the Bench Training and Development Committee. Jennie was formerly Legal Director of the Occupational Pensions Regulatory Authority. When her busy practice allows, Jennie likes to indulge her passion for travelling. To consult Jennie on any corporate Pensions matter, please call her on +44 (0)20 7749 2700 or send her an email by clicking below: