Independent Trustee Company Blog

Showing posts with label AMRF. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AMRF. Show all posts

Thursday, September 12, 2013

The Good, the Bad and the Ugly – the revised Revenue Pensions Manual


When you have finished cringing at the admittedly appalling juxtaposition of a classic of its genre and a somewhat unexciting piece of work, you will probably have to agree that the Revenue Pensions Manual is a critical document for anyone practising in pensions, be they providers or advisers.  And it has been recently revised by Revenue with changes being made to several chapters and new ones being written.

A detailed review of the changes is beyond the scope of this blog, but it suffices to point out that some aspects of the revised manual are, well, good, others are bad and some are a bit ugly.

First, the good. Chapter 22 on Pension Adjustment Orders confirms that either a pension adjustment order or a property adjustment order can be used for ARF and AMRF benefits.  Previously there had been a concern that a transfer of benefits from an ARF/AMRF to the ARF/AMRF of a spouse, on foot of a property adjustment order, would give rise to a distribution for tax purposes and a consequent income tax hit.

The same section of Chapter 22 confirms that the recipient spouse or civil partner can set up an ARF without qualifying for it under the Taxes Consolidation Act.  While this is to be welcomed, it does seem remarkable that Revenue has the discretion, with no legislative authority, to grant tax relief for a whole segment of society. 

As for the bad, it’s not that the changes are bad – it’s more the lost opportunity to correct some issues that are crying out for change.  For example, the manual continues to provide that a proprietary director who takes their benefits due to ill-health must dispose of their shareholding.  While there may be some justification in making the disposal of shares a condition of early retirement - to prove genuine withdrawal from service where the person is otherwise fit (though one would think that a P45 should do the trick) - there seems no reason why a person who has to retire because of ill-health should be subject to the same condition.  This requirement may have been imposed in error because Revenue systematically put the rules on ill-health in the chapter on early retirement.  And in practice Revenue even demand the sale of shares in cases of retirement due to serious ill-health - these are the cases, known as the death’s door concession, where the member only has weeks rather than months to live.

As for the ugly, and admittedly this is just a pet peeve of mine, I would have preferred it if the whole manual had been treated as a single document and someone had gone through it with a view to making it more readable or even to format it consistently.  Granted, this is not an easy task with what is essentially a very dry and rule-bound subject, and it is probably a resource issue (and that cannot make things easy), but given that it is a primary source material for an important, albeit often unacknowledged, area of most people’s lives it is a shame that there wasn’t time for someone to give it the care and attention I feel it merits.

One final comment concerns the process by which the manual is put together.  There seems to be a lack of consultation in the production of revisions to the manual.  For example, our understanding is that the Revenue officials who deal with advisers on a day-to-day basis have little input into the manual.  That is a pity because surely they are the ones who know the kind of issues that are relevant to advisers and, more importantly, pension scheme members.

And, apart from consulting those closest to the issues, perhaps Revenue might also enter into a consultation process with the industry, in the same manner practiced by the Pensions Board and the Central Bank, before engaging in further updates of such an important policy document as the manual.  Such an approach may benefit all parties involved, to include Revenue.

It would also save us from blogs with excruciating headlines.

Head of ITC Consulting and Group Legal

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Finance Act 2013 – the Bill


The Government published Finance Bill 2013 on 13th February 2013.
In the area of pensions, the Government introduces new thresholds to the regime for ARFs and vested PRSAs. The measures are significant because they contravene previously introduced efforts at securing pensioners’ retirement income in old age.   The new thresholds, which had not been flagged by the Minister in his Budget speech in December, means that the thresholds which applied to ARFs pre-Finance Act 2011 will now see a comeback.
Since Finance Act 2011, members of Occupational Pension Schemes and contributors to Personal Pensions and PRSAs who have an annual pension income of €18,000 can take the entirety of their pension benefits into an ARF.  Those who do not have sufficient pension income must first set aside pension benefits to the value of €119,800 in an AMRF - or buy an annuity for that amount. The AMRF has to be kept until age 75, or until such times as the pensioner becomes entitled to an annual pension income of €18,000 (whichever is the earlier).
However, from the passing of the Finance Act, the requirement of a €18,000 pension income will be reduced to €12,700. This means that recipients of the Old Age Pension (currently around €12,000) who have very limited additional pension income, no longer have to put money aside for very old age. Accordingly, Finance Act 2013 effectively marks the beginning of the end for the prudence of thinking which infused the AMRF concept.
Furthermore, from the date of the passing of the Finance Act, the max value of the AMRF will be reduced from €119,800 to €63,500.  But it is perhaps more precise to say that the value of ARFs will be increased by the difference, namely €56,300. This is significant because ARFs are subject to imputed distributions which, in turn, are subject to income tax - while AMRFs are not. So, bigger ARFs, bigger income for the Exchequer. While there can be no other reason for decreasing the value of the AMRF other than to improve the tax take for the Exchequer, the measure is, seen in isolation,  perhaps of little importance as the AMRF regime is on the way out – as already argued.
Another measure, one which was flagged in the Budget, is the access to AVCs prior to retirement in certain circumstances.  An individual who has made AVCs can make a once-off withdrawal of up to 30% of the value of their AVCs prior to reaching retirement.  This is restricted to AVC funds. Access to other types of pension arrangements, such as personal pensions, is not available.  The access to AVCs will be available for a period of 3 years from the passing of the Finance Act 2013.
Funds withdrawn in this manner will be subject to income tax at 41% but will be exempt from USC and PRSI.  If an individual can provide a certificate of tax credits or evidence that they are subject to income tax at the 20% rate, the tax payable may be less than 41%.
While this would appear to be a welcome measure at first glance, on reflection it could once again signal the government’s shift to short-sighted policies to increase the short term tax take from pension funds.  As with the changes to the AMRF regime, allowing early access to AVCs only serves to reduce the benefits available to fund an individual’s retirement which may once again leave them dependant on the State later in life.