What was the Pay Related Deduction for?

Páid

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What were the Pension Related Deduction (PRD) and Additional Superannuation Contribution (ASC) for ?

Are public servants not currently paying ASC towards their pensions (since 2019 for ASC and PRD since 2009)?
 
What were the Pension Related Deduction (PRD) and Additional Superannuation Contribution (ASC) for ?

Are public servants not currently paying ASC towards their pensions (since 2019 for ASC and PRD since 2009)?

These were wage cuts. pure and simple. They attract no pensionable benefits at all.
 
Neither of you is quite right. The original PRD was a pure pay cut as it conferred no additional pension benefit and no tax relief was granted on it.

The ASC (which replaced the PRD in 2018) varies depending on what scheme you are in, and tax relief is granted on it like a normal pension contribution.

Well, you can call it whatever you like, but its a paycut.

A pension scheme was set up for employees, with a defined contribution and a defined benefit

Then the contribution ( percentage of gross pay) was increased, considerably. There was no increase in pension benefit ( percentage of salary) from these substantial charges. So, its a paycut, tax relief or not.
 
Its not linked to your Public Sector Pension , it was a trick slipped into a pay restoration deal which made the "Pension Levy" legal , the big difference between ASC and the "Pension Levy " is that ASC is charged only on your pensionable pay and allowances but the Pension Levy was charged against all pay . It altered your original contract terms without your consent under FEMPI but made it legal in ASC which by the way did not even match the pay restoration in that paydeal , the Unions and pre 95 sold everybody else down the river on that one .
 
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Like the standard pension deduction the PRD was not subject to tax. Both were deducted before tax was applied.
However, unlike the standard deduction, it did not count towards the age-related pension contribution limits.
 
I'm open to correction but I can't find a reference to it in a Finance Act of that era.

Tax relief for the PRD was contained in s 16(1) FEMPI Act 2009

16.— (1) The Taxes Consolidation Act 1997 is amended in Chapter 4 of Part 30 by inserting the following section after section 790B:

“Relief for deduction under Financial Emergency Measures in the Public Interest Act 2009.

790C.— Any deduction made under the Financial Emergency Measures in the Public Interest Act 2009 in respect of a public servant (within the meaning of that Act) shall, in assessing income tax under Schedule E, be allowed to be deducted as an expense incurred in the year in which the deduction is made.”. “
 
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Exactly. It was not subject to tax. So it was tax-relieved at the marginal rate. In the same way as the standard pension contribution.
 
Well, you can call it whatever you like, but its a paycut.

A pension scheme was set up for employees, with a defined contribution and a defined benefit

Then the contribution ( percentage of gross pay) was increased, considerably. There was no increase in pension benefit ( percentage of salary) from these substantial charges. So, its a paycut, tax relief or not.
Correct
 
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