Steven Barrett
Registered User
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Read the paper and it's alright for a first effort. A few points on it (copied & pasted from a blog I am writing on it for Monday)
Steven
http://www.bluewaterfp.ie (www.bluewaterfp.ie)
- You have the option of opting out during the 7th & 8th month of membership. If you don't opt out then, there will be limited opportunities that weren't given when you can opt out again.
- If you opt out, you will be re-enrolled after 3 years and can opt out again during the 7th & 8th month (I agree with this because people who opt out once will most probably not rejoin unless prompted).
- If you opt out, you will receive a refund of the value of your contributions.
- The State and employer contributions will be used to pay for the CPA (I don't see why employers shouldn't get a refund of contributions too).
- They envisage that this will be in place by the end of 2022 (they have just rolled out their initial thoughts on this. It has to go through a consultation process and finalise the exact nature of the scheme. Then the IT infrastructure has to be built to run what will be a massive scheme. I can't see it being ready in just over 4 years).
- Duke raised very good points on who will provide advice on this?
- And the 0.5% charge is extremely low. The cost of the IT system for this will be massive. It will take a provider a long time to make money back on this e.g. €20,000 salary at 14% contribution = €2,800 * 0.5% = €14 a year?!! I know there will be compounding and scale but still.
- €75,000 cap. Are they going to reduce the current €115,000 cap to €75,000 or carry on with two different caps?
- Very vague on retirement options. Almost as if they got to the end of writing the paper, they were all tired and cranky, so they just through something down and said they'd do that later.
- Contributions cease at State pension age but they don't say whether you can access the fund if you stop working before then.
- If their aim is to reduce tax relief to 25%, where does that leave the self employed? Company directors can make much larger company contributions and claim tax relief against them. But the self employed are limited on how much they put in and only getting 25% relief will put them at a massive disadvantage in saving for retirement. And if you are in a profession, you are excluded from being a company.
Steven
http://www.bluewaterfp.ie (www.bluewaterfp.ie)
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