Brendan Burgess
Founder
- Messages
- 54,768
I was at the afternoon session, Boss. It is hard to believe that this will be TEE. It’s not just the 1 for 3 top up. The employer’s contribution will effectively be EEE. This blows all existing arrangements up to the €75k max out of the water. At our session the assumption was that drawdown would be conventional i.e. tax free lump sum, annuity and/or ARF. If it is all tax free none of that is relevant. A really big gap in the whole thing, which they admit, is that they have effectively ignored the decumulation phase and yet they state that this phase needs to be sorted out from the beginning.2) They don't consider that the draw down of the pension will be taxed.
The current pensions system is EET i.e. tax exempt on contribution, tax exempt on growth, and taxed on drawdown.
They consider the proposed system as TEE. That people are contributing out of taxed income. I found that astonishing as they are getting a 25% tax credit via the 1: 3 matching.
I don’t think you are right that employers will have to pay 6% on all employees, it is only on those that are in the scheme.
he presentation shows that we are heading from our current dependency ratio of 1 pensioner to 4.9 of working age to 1 to 2.3. N
I was at the IAPF Conference today and heard that the benefits emerging from the proposed Auto Enrollment scheme will be paid tax-free, so no Income Tax on the pension income. I was surprised at this, since the State contribution (2% after 6 years) is a form of tax relief (even if not marginal relief).
2) They don't consider that the draw down of the pension will be taxed.
The current pensions system is EET i.e. tax exempt on contribution, tax exempt on growth, and taxed on drawdown.
They consider the proposed system as TEE. That people are contributing out of taxed income. I found that astonishing as they are getting a 25% tax credit via the 1: 3 matching.
5) Some in the industry felt that a provider could not provide what is required for just 0.5% of the fund. In the initial years, they would lose a lot of money on that. They would start to make money only in later years. And then their license would be up for review. Another provider might well sit out the current tender process with a view to taking it over when it's up and running.
A woman in the audience said that this discriminated against women who were more likely to be in low paid and part-time jobs.
Is there an upper income limit to this scheme?
Are these auto-enrolment pots closer to ISAs than pension funds?
The question I would like to know Will everyone who pays income tax be included even people who already have max pension pot ,I think you are right. It sounds more like an individual savings account.
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