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Possible
Taxation Implications Of Lifetime Capital Protection For Annuities
by Dr Ros Altmann
May 2002
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material on this page is subject to copyright and must not be reproduced
without the author's permission.)
Concerns
have been expressed about the possible tax revenue implications
of permitting ‘money-back guarantees’ for annuities.
My
initial assumption would be that introduction of lifetime capital
protection should have a positive impact on tax revenue. This would
be for several reasons:
1.
Timing:
The
current rules only permit capital protection for up to 10 years
and the payments must be made in the form of ongoing income. This
means that the tax on the remaining annuity payments is only received
over the course of the 10 years. However, with the proposal for
‘money-back guarantees’, the outstanding balance would
be paid in one lump sum (to allow the estate to be wound up promptly).
I propose that this sum would be subject to a one-off tax deduction
(similar to that which applies to drawdown) and would be taxable,
without going into the person’s estate. Thus, the Revenue
would get the tax sooner, which would mean a net positive to the
Exchequer.
2.
No escape from tax because sum paid will not fall into inheritance
tax exemption zone:
With
some of the new types of approved annuities (such as the ‘Open
Annuity’), if a person dies before annuitising, their pension
pot is treated as part of their estate, and may consequently escape
tax altogether. If people are encouraged to take a conventional
annuity with capital protection, rather than choosing the ‘Open
Annuity’, the net tax take could increase.
3.
People will be less likely to opt for drawdown, if they have the
‘money back guarantee’, so tax will be received sooner
and may be higher.
There
is significant evidence that a major reason for people choosing
drawdown is the death benefits issue. If this issue could be resolved
with lifetime capital protection, many people are likely to choose
to annuitise, rather than going into drawdown. This would mean that
the Revenue will receive tax on a higher income stream from an annuity
straight away (with drawdown, the income level is much lower than
from an annuity, so the tax received is also much lower).
Furthermore,
drawdown has performed very poorly in the last few years, so the
capital sum invested has, in many cases, become smaller and annuity
rates have fallen. These two factors mean that the annuity income
ends up lower when a person in drawdown finally annuitises, so the
tax received would also be lower. If the person had bought an annuity,
instead of drawdown, the tax take would be higher.
4.
Encouragement of pensions:
It
is possible that the Revenue believes introducing ‘money back
guarantees’ will encourage people to put significantly more
into pensions. They may, therefore, be concerned that they will
have to pay much more in tax relief. I think this concern (if it
exists) is misguided.
It
is true that addressing the death benefits fears should help make
pensions relatively more attractive to people, but I do not believe
there is any justification for thinking it will have a dramatic
effect. The most likely outcome would be that money back guarantees
will just help prevent people from reducing their pension savings
(which is likely, if the current situation persists). If people
stop putting so much into pensions, Government’s whole pension
strategy will fail, and I would have thought that anything we could
do to encourage people to keep providing for their older age would
be useful.
5.
This is NOT capital extraction – an annuity must still be
bought.
The
lifetime capital proposal is not in any way like the proposals for
capital extraction. People still have to buy an annuity and are
not free to take the capital out and spend it as they choose. This
will, therefore, still provide an effective ceiling on pension contributions,
and people will not suddenly rush to put huge amounts into their
pensions. It could be that officials have not fully appreciated
this point and it may be necessary to stress the fact that this
is still buying an annuity. It is also no different from allowing
those with large capital sums in drawdown to receive a lump sum
if they die before age 75. Why should we allow it for rich people
who die early, but not for everyone who buys an annuity? This aspect
of policy is currently highly inequitable.
6.
Lifetime Capital Protection may entail lower annuity income, reducing
tax received.
It
is possible that the Revenue is concerned that people will still
wait until age 75 to buy the annuity and then take the lifetime
capital protection, which would imply lower annuity income (about
16% lower according to Prudential figures) and, therefore, lower
tax revenue. Firstly, I believe it is much more likely that people
will annuitise sooner with lifetime capital protection, so they
will annuitise at younger ages and the cost of capital protection
will, therefore, be much less. Secondly, it is already possible
to buy 5-year or 10-year guarantees, which also reduce the annuity
payments, so the net difference is much smaller than just considering
standard annuity rates, compared with lifetime capital guarantee
rates.
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