The introduction of imputed distributions announced in November’s budget caused some concern to fans of the PRSA. The Memorandum published by the Department of Finance immediately after the Minister’s Budget speech proclaimed that income tax should now be paid on 5%/6% of PRSAs post retirement but also that the tax should be calculated on the aggregate value of all of an individual’s PRSAs once benefits were taken from just one of them.
The
proposal led some advisors to state that the PRSA was no longer a useful
vehicle to hold pension benefits. The clarification provided by Finance Bill
2012 that the imputed distribution would only apply to post retirement assets
brought some relief.
However,
for many reasons we still see the PRSA as a useful and flexible vehicle for
pension planning, even after the introduction of the imputed distribution. Here
are a few reasons why:
- There is no imputed distribution where the PRSA investor has not drawn down benefits.
- Income from UK property held in a PRSA, as opposed to an ARF, can be taken tax-free.
- Where no benefits have been accessed, the fund goes to the PRSA holder’s estate tax-free. In the same circumstances, benefits of an occupational pension scheme have to be spent buying an annuity for dependants.
- The PRSA allows you to consolidate personal pensions and frozen occupational benefits and facilitates the transfer of benefits from a personal pension to an occupational pension scheme.
- The PRSA offers statutory protection against creditors, the ARF does not.
- The PRSA allows you to split benefits which allow significant planning opportunities.
- A PRSA investor who is also a 20% director and who wishes to retire before Normal Retirement Age is not compelled to sell his/her shareholding of the employer company.
- A PRSA investor can continue to contribute until age 75, no matter whether benefits are taken or not.
- The PRSA is the most carefully regulated pension product in the country, thus meeting the demands of the ever more attentive pension client.
- The PRSA is still the only pension vehicle which allows all types of contributors; the employed, the unemployed, those without Schedule D or E income.
We will of course continue to keep
you updated with developments in the Pension’s area as the finance bill runs
through the houses of the Oireachtas.
More information on ITC's PRSA here.
More information on ITC's PRSA here.