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The pension annual allowance will remain at £40,000, and chancellor Phillip Hammond has also resisted tinkering with the thorny issue of pension tax relief.
Chancellor Phillip Hammond cold-shouldered speculation that pensions would be meddled with in order to fund future spending pledges.
Various pension experts had feared a cut to the annual pension allowance, with many pencilling in a reduction from £40,000 to £30,000 as a means of raising the £20 billion of additional funding that has been promised to the NHS.
But in today’s Budget (29 October), Hammond resisted the urge to tinker with the allowance, meaning the allowance will remain at £40,000. Nor did he touch the current lifetime allowance of just over £1 million.
In a move that was more widely expected Hammond also opted against tinkering with the thorny issue of pension tax relief. For some time now there have been concerns higher-rate pension tax relief is in the government’s sights, but once again it proved to be merely speculation.
George Osborne, the former chancellor, consulted at length on possible reforms to the tax relief on pension contributions, although he stopped short of implementing change. However, the system is expensive, with pension tax relief costing the government £39 billion in the last tax year.
Steve Webb, director of policy at Royal London, comments: “The chancellor’s windfall from better-than-expected borrowing forecasts meant that he did not have to cut back pension tax relief in this Budget.
“But having described the system as ‘eye-wateringly expensive’, it is likely to be only a matter of time before this chancellor – or his successor – comes back for more. Today’s respite for pension tax relief is likely to be only temporary.”
That’s all the more likely as critics say the system favours the wealthy, as higher rate and additional tax payers gain the biggest tax relief on contributions.
A radical move to introduce a flat rate of pension tax relief has been mooted for some time, but as things stand today the proverbial can has been kicked down the road in regard to how over the long term people are incentivised to pay money into pensions.
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Source Moneywise https://ift.tt/2zcDYlh
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