Brendan Burgess
Founder
- Messages
- 54,768
Elsewhere, I have expressed my frustration that the designers of this did not realise that saving for a home is a person's first priority. It just a lack of clarity of thought.
These are well paid civil servants who have never had to think about pensions or worry about getting the deposit together to buy a house.
Bizarrely, in the straw man consultation, they actually proposed that on drawdown, the fund would not be taxable. There were gasps in the room when the guy in charge said this. They have fixed this in the Design Principles.
But here is another mad one:
From the Design Principles Page 20 (PDF page 22)
The upper age limit for being enrolled automatically is to be set at 60 years as it is unlikely that a participant joining over
this age will accumulate a meaningful pension fund prior to retirement. However, any employee over that age may opt in if they wish.
A 20 year old who opts in is putting their money out of reach for 45 years and may be preventing themselves from ever buying a house. So he has a decision to make.
A 61 year old who opts in and contributes €1,200 , gets €1,200 from his employer and €400 from the taxpayer. So they turn their €1,200 into €2,800 and can access it 5 years later.
Who wouldn't want free money?
Brendan
These are well paid civil servants who have never had to think about pensions or worry about getting the deposit together to buy a house.
Bizarrely, in the straw man consultation, they actually proposed that on drawdown, the fund would not be taxable. There were gasps in the room when the guy in charge said this. They have fixed this in the Design Principles.
But here is another mad one:
From the Design Principles Page 20 (PDF page 22)
The upper age limit for being enrolled automatically is to be set at 60 years as it is unlikely that a participant joining over
this age will accumulate a meaningful pension fund prior to retirement. However, any employee over that age may opt in if they wish.
A 20 year old who opts in is putting their money out of reach for 45 years and may be preventing themselves from ever buying a house. So he has a decision to make.
A 61 year old who opts in and contributes €1,200 , gets €1,200 from his employer and €400 from the taxpayer. So they turn their €1,200 into €2,800 and can access it 5 years later.
Who wouldn't want free money?
Brendan