The Finance Bill has been published today. Both html and 2-vol pdf versions are available from the Parliamentary website together with Explanatory Notes (1,148 pages; pensions folk will wish to focus on pages 787 - 825). These Notes and shorter Lobby Notes for each clause and schedule of the Bill are also available as pdf downloads from the Treasury page.
The material directly relevant to pensions is contained in Part 4: three quite short Clauses 87 – 89 and two lengthy Schedules 28 and 29. No big surprises are apparent, all the significant legislative changes having been announced already, either at the time of the Pre-Budget Report (PBR) last October or the Budget earlier this month.
Clause 87 introduces a new s.199A into FA 2004 to make indirect contributions by employers to registered pension schemes subject to the rules on spreading of tax relief. It applies where an employer makes a payment intended to facilitate a large pension contribution relative to the contribution in the previous year. This clause ensures that the relief the employer is entitled to for such a payment is subject to the same tax treatment as if it were a contribution under a registered pension scheme made directly by the employer. It is designed to close a loophole whereby some employers have been seeking to avoid spreading of contributions by interposing a new company and financing it to pay the pension contribution. A draft of this legislation was published at the Pre-Budget Report on 9 October 2007.
Clause 88 introduces Schedule 28 which ensures that scheme pensions and lifetime annuities are used to provide an income for life and not as a means of diverting tax-relieved pension savings into inheritance. This makes the treatment of scheme pensions and lifetime annuities consistent with that of alternatively secured pensions. Sch 28 amends how the unauthorised member payment tax charges have effect for registered pension schemes and their members when there are assignments, surrenders and increases of benefits after death. It also makes changes to the inheritance tax (IHT) provisions in respect of registered pension schemes.
After consulting last March (see Aries article), five pages of draft legislation amending IHTA 1984 and FA 2004 ss.172 (assignment), 172A (surrender) and 172B (increase in rights of connected person on death) were published, with further details last October in PBRN 15.
Clause 89 and Schedule 29 (see page 133 of pdf Vol 2) are more wide-ranging, as the amendments they make to FA 2004 and IHTA 1984 give schemes additional flexibility, amend regulatory powers, clarify the law, deal with the transition to the new regime, ensure that scheme pensions and lifetime annuities are used to provide an income for life and prevent abuse of the rules.
Of particular interest is a new subsection (2) introduced into s.164 FA 2004 (Authorised member payments). This new subsection widens the existing regulation-making power, in what becomes s.164(1)(f), to treat certain payments prescribed in regulations as authorised member payments by providing a power for such regulations also to:
This is the solution HMRC has devised to partially address, for the time being at least, the serious problem of the large volume of unauthorised payments created by the current legislation (see Aries article). The amended power will be used to provide four new regulations to ensure certain payments are treated as authorised payments when:
A new category of benefit crystallisation event (BCE 9) is created where amounts are treated as having crystallised in accordance with regulations made under what becomes s.164(1)(f).
Among the other changes: