Independent Trustee Company Blog

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Dáil Drawdown: Standard Fund Threshold



Minister Noonan went on to say; "there is currently no underlying data available to my Department or to the Revenue Commissioners on which to base reliable estimates of the savings from a further significant reduction in the SFT to the level indicated in the question. Information on the numbers and values of individual pension funds or on individual accrued benefits are not generally required to be supplied to the Revenue Commissioners by the administrators of pension schemes and personal pension arrangements. The estimated savings indicated at the time in respect the Budget and Finance Act 2011 change in the SFT were quite conservative, based as they were, on incomplete data and using very broad assumptions. Indeed, those underlying data and assumptions may not be directly applicable to determining the effect of a further significant decrease.



My Department has been engaging with representatives of the pensions industry with a view, among other things, to gathering private pensions-related data which may be of value into the future in estimating the costs of potential changes in the pensions’ tax area. These engagements are ongoing".

Source: www.oireachtas.ie

Monday, October 15, 2012

OECD Review: Financial Sustainability


In our last post on the OECD review, we discussed how Ireland's policy stance measured up against key criteria, looking at the performance of the Social Insurance Fund. Another item on the OECD's agenda is that of financial stability and how it is evaluated through international analysis. The first step to this evaluation is to look at international comparisons. 

As you can see from the chart below, in 2010, Ireland ranked somewhat average in our public expenditure on pensions, with the inclusion of all government pension costs; contributory, social welfare pensions, non-contributory pensions and public sector pensions.




If you look at the next chart, you can see that the projected change in expenditure is quite significant between 2010 and 2060, Ireland projected to rank third on the table.



The charts highlight the rising cost of State funded pensions which the National Pensions Reserve Fund (NPRF) was intended to offset.

Broadly speaking 1/3rd of the NPRF covered public sector pensions whilst 2/3rds covered social welfare pensions.

The fastest increasing cost is public sector pensions. These grew from an estimated capital cost of €75bn in 2007 to €129bn in 2009. No figures have been produced since, however it is likely that that cost has continued growing.


Source: OECD Review of Pensions in Ireland, 14.09.2012. John Martin, Edward Whitehouse, Anna D'Addio, Andrew Reilly. 

Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Dáil Drawdown - Pension Industry Charges Working Group

In this weeks instalment of Dáil Drawdown, Minister Noonan discusses the pensions working group. Let us know your thoughts. 




Minister Noonan went on to say: I understand that the report of this group is currently being finalised and will then be presented for consideration to my colleague, Ms Joan Burton TD, the Minister for Social Protection before being submitted to Government and published. Appropriate decisions will be made on the report’s contents and recommendations, and among other things, on the scope for productive interaction with the pensions industry in relation to offsetting the impact of the pension fund levy through reductions in fees or charges.


Source:www.oireachtas.ie

Thursday, October 4, 2012

Commercial Court rules creditors cannot access pension funds



The High Court, on Tuesday, delivered judgment in a significant case on pension security on which ITC Consulting advised.

In the case, a bank, owed money by two individuals, initially succeeded in appointing a receiver over the individuals’ pension assets in March this year.  The appointment was appealed to the Commercial Division of the High Court and the very welcome news for many pension holders is that the Court struck out the appointment of the receiver on Tuesday.

The Court considered that the characteristics of the pension schemes precluded the appointment of a receiver. The schemes concerned were individual self-administered schemes and ITC Consulting was appointed by solicitors for some beneficiaries of the pension schemes to give an expert opinion.
     
The prevailing view in the pensions industry was that pre-retirement benefits were not vulnerable to attack by creditors.  However, there was no clear Irish legal authority on the point so the matter was not absolutely free from doubt until the judgment. The 2010 case where a receiver was appointed over Brendan Murtagh’s Approved Retirement Fund had also caused concern.  The issue has received significant attention from the media and commentators as for many people their pension is their most valuable asset and the idea that somehow creditors could access someone’s pension was an understandable worry.  Thankfully, the judgment has now clarified matters in favour of the pension holders.

It is important to note that, whilst most Irish pension schemes have the same characteristics as the pension schemes in the case, all scheme documents must be reviewed to ensure that appropriate protections are in place. This is a service that ITC Consulting is well placed to provide in view of its experience in this area.  

Associate Director
ITC Consulting

Monday, October 1, 2012

OECD Review of Pensions in Ireland

At a recent consultation forum in Farmleigh House, the OECD presented the first part of their review of pension policy in Ireland. The presentation, which focused on the initial stage of the review; assessment and evaluation, was presented by John Martin and Ed Whitehouse. ITC's Managing Director Aidan McLoughlin attended the forum and over the coming weeks we will bring you some of the main points discussed. 

As mentioned, the initial stage of the review is the assessment and evaluation stage. The second stage which will presented at the end of the year will see recommendations from the OECD.

The OECD set out a three-pronged strategy for achieving both adequacy and sustainability:
  • longer working lives
  • greater private-pension savings
  • better targeting of public retirement- income provision on those most in need
They ask how does Ireland's policy stance measure up against key criteria?

A key test was the performance of the Social Insurance Fund. This is where PRSI contributions are paid and which will ultimately provide contributors with Social Welfare pensions. Its ability to do this depends on its solvency. As the following slide illustrates the view of 2010 (as projected in 2007) and the actual outcome is radically different – a 30% deficit has now materialised. This fundamentally challenges the ability of the State to continue to deliver Social Welfare pensions at current levels. Those relying on the State for a significant portion of their retirement income should think again.




Over the coming weeks we will discuss the steps taken to resolve this significant deficit and see overseas comparisons in relation to pension provision. 


Source: OECD Review of Pensions in Ireland, 14.09.2012. John Martin, Edward Whitehouse, Anna D'Addio, Andrew Reilly.