IFS: Our complex and poorly targeted system of tax subsidies for pensions needs reform
The current system of pensions tax provides overly generous tax
breaks to those with the biggest pensions, those with high
retirement incomes and those receiving big employer pension
contributions. It does relatively little to support many of those
facing low income in retirement, who most need it. Reducing limits
on pension saving – the route taken in recent years – is not a good
solution: it does nothing to support low earners, adds significant
complexity and leaves...Request free
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The current system of pensions tax provides overly generous tax breaks to those with the biggest pensions, those with high retirement incomes and those receiving big employer pension contributions. It does relatively little to support many of those facing low income in retirement, who most need it. Reducing limits on pension saving – the route taken in recent years – is not a good solution: it does nothing to support low earners, adds significant complexity and leaves subsidies that are still too generous for some. A long-term vision for the system is needed. In a new report, A blueprint for a better tax treatment of pensions, published today and funded by the abrdn Financial Fairness Trust, IFS researchers set out proposals to even out tax support for pension saving – reducing subsidies where they are overly generous and increasing them where saving incentives are weaker. The reforms would boost the retirement incomes of the bottom 80% of earners and provide greater encouragement for them to save more in a pension, while getting rid of overly generous subsidies that benefit those on high incomes could enable the removal of the complexities created by tapering away annual savings allowances. The report proposes the following changes:
This package could be made revenue-neutral in the long run, and even in the short run. There would be an up-front cost to giving relief on employee NICs. It could readily be met by reducing the generous treatment of employer contributions. Revenue could also be raised by applying some NICs to pension withdrawals immediately. Given that those with high levels of private pension income will almost all have enjoyed significant employer contributions on which no NICs were ever paid, there is in any case an argument for such a levy. Real reform has been stymied for too long by a concern to avoid changing the way that pensions in payment, or soon to be in payment, are treated. There is a strong case for implementing a better system swiftly rather than allowing overly generous elements to linger for longer, typically to the benefit of older generations at the expense of subsequent generations. Isaac Delestre, a Research Economist at IFS and an author of the report, said: ‘Pension saving is treated generously for high earners. Even under pension caps, over £250,000 can be withdrawn from a pension free of income tax. Employer pension contributions escape National Insurance contributions entirely. And pensions are an easy-to-use vehicle for avoiding inheritance tax. At the same time, the 25% tax-free component is worthless to those who do not pay income tax in retirement. And those making individual pension contributions receive much smaller subsidies. ‘Our proposals would boost the retirement incomes of low and middle earners and provide greater encouragement for them to save more in a pension. They provide a coherent vision for the taxation of pensions and don’t require the complexity, and big losses for some current basic-rate taxpayers, that would result from restricting income tax relief to the basic rate, for which some have argued. This evening-out of tax support for pension saving would be more equitable and more economically efficient, and would allow the current set of poorly designed limits on what individuals can save in a pension to be relaxed. ‘We would retain the current system of up-front relief from income tax that is of much benefit to higher-rate taxpayers. But our proposal to move employee NICs to a similar basis would benefit low and middle earners making individual pension contributions at the expense of higher-rate taxpayers enjoying large employer pension contributions. ‘Our system of pensions taxation has too many features that are arbitrary, wasteful or unfair. It’s long past time we retired them.’ Mubin Haq, Chief Executive of abrdn Financial Fairness Trust, said: ‘Collectively we save £115 billion a year in workplace pensions, with these savings treated generously by income tax, National Insurance and inheritance tax. But many of these tax reliefs are more generous to those with the largest pension pots, whilst millions of those on low-to-middle incomes are likely to fall far short of the retirement savings they need to support them in old age. Today’s report proposes a set of recommendations which would rebalance where our tax reliefs go, with the bottom 80% of earners gaining most from the reforms. This would help deliver greater financial fairness and boost retirement savings for those who need them most.’
ENDS Notes to Editor
A blueprint for a better tax treatment of pensions is an
IFS report by Stuart Adam, Isaac Delestre, Carl Emmerson and
David Sturrock. If you have a question about the report or would like to speak to one of the authors, please contact the IFS press office: kirsty.ridyard@ifs.org.uk and greg.opie@ifs.org.uk | 07730 667013 The report will be published on the IFS website on Monday here: https://ifs.org.uk/publications/blueprint-better-tax-treatment-pensions The abrdn Financial Fairness Trust has supported this project (grant reference 202107-GR000046). The Trust funds research, policy work and campaigning activities to tackle financial problems and improve living standards for people on low-to-middle incomes in the UK. It is an independent charitable trust registered in Scotland. Co-funding from the ESRC-funded Institute for the Microeconomic Analysis of Public Policy at IFS (grant number ES/T014334/1) is also gratefully acknowledged.
Neither of these organisations bears any responsibility for the
views expressed in this report, which – along with any errors and
omissions – are those of the authors alone. |