PENSIONS
A pension scheme
is a tax efficient way of saving for your retirement. You can either have
a Personal Pension Plan or a "Company" based pension scheme, which will
be governed by Occupational Scheme Rules.
Personal
Pension Plan:
In a personal
pension you will build up your own individual account and you may invest
in a variety of different funds. Your scheme will usually be administered
by an Insurance Company. You and your employer can contribute into the
scheme within annual limits set by the Inland Revenue.
When you retire
you must use at least 75% of the fund to provide an income for the rest
of your life, usually by purchasing an Annuity. You may take up to 25%
of the Non-Protected Rights fund as a tax-free lump sum.
SERPS Rebates,
Contracting Out and Protected Rights
If you are an employee, you can have a rebate paid into a Personal Pension
Plan instead of SERPS. This is known as 'Contracting Out' of SERPS. Rebates
are age related and deciding whether to opt out of SERPS, or to opt back
is a decision you should take with your financial adviser.
Monies
held in a Contracted Out personal pension scheme are referred to as "Protected
Rights" and you may only take a pension from a Protected Rights fund,
you cannot take a lump sum.
Company
Pension Schemes:
Also called
a "Occupational Pension Schemes" (OPS's) or "Retirement and Death Benefit
Schemes"
A pension scheme
set up by an employer for the benefit of the employees. It is run by trustees
and usually provides life assurance and dependant's benefits, as well
as pension benefits. The scheme benefits can be Final Salary based or
Money Purchase based.
Final Salary
Pension Scheme
An employer's pension scheme where your retirement benefits depend on
the number of years you've worked for a company, your final salary just
before retirement and a formula laid down by the scheme rules.
Money Purchase
Pension Scheme
This
usually refers to an employer's pension scheme where your payments are
invested in an individual "Money Pot" in your name. Your retirement benefits
depend on the amount you've paid in, how much the investments have grown,
and the annuity rates when you retire. This contrasts with a Final Salary
scheme where your benefits depend on a formula usually linked to your
salary and the number of years worked.
The scheme may be Contracted Out: a Contracted Out Money Purchase Scheme
(COMP) or Contracted In: a Contracted in Money Purchase Scheme (CIMP).
If you are in a CIMP then you can Contract Out separately through a Personal
Pension, see above.
There are a
number of other types of pension, which are described below, however,
these all fall either into the "Personal" or the "Company" camp: -
Under Personal
Pension Rules:-
- Group
Personal Pension (GPP)
A "grouped " set of Personal Pension Plans set up by an employer on
behalf of its employees. Membership is voluntary and the employer may
or may not contribute. Contributions are normally deducted from salary
for all members and the total sent to the pension provider. Typically
GPP's have slightly cheaper terms than individual PPP's.
- Income
Drawdown or Withdrawal
This allows you to leave your pension fund invested instead of buying
a annuity. You withdraw money directly from the pension fund within
certain limits set buy the Inland Revenue.
You can make withdrawals between your 50th and 75th birthday from the
funds built up from your and your employer's contributions.
On your death the fund can be paid out, less 35% tax, to your spouse
or your dependants.
Under Occupational
Scheme Rules: -
- Additional
Voluntary Contributions (AVC's)
Where a member of an employer's pension scheme chooses to boost their
retirement benefits by making additional payments into their employer's
pension scheme.
You can either buy "Added Years" to increase your benefit entitlement
or in some cases you invest in specific funds offered by the scheme
to create your own additional pension fund.
- Free
Standing Additional Voluntary Contributions (FSAVC's)
Where a member of an employer's pension scheme chooses to boost their
retirement benefits by making additional payments into an independent
scheme, outside their employer's scheme.
Lastly, a little bit about the :-
Basic
State Retirement Pension
If your earnings
are above a certain level you will have to pay
National Insurance contributions. These contributions build up your
rights to the Basic State Retirement Pension, often called the 'Old age
pension'. The amount of pension you receive depends on what you have contributed
before you retire, not on your earnings. A full basic retirement pension
is paid at a flat-rate amount.
Some people
who are not in paid work (perhaps because they are unemployed, long-term
sick, or looking after somebody) can still build up some basic retirement
pension.
At the moment
the State Pension Age is 65 for men and 60 for women. But the State Pension
Age for women is going to change from 60 to 65. This change will start
to happen from 2010 and by 2020 the State Pension Age will be 65 for both
men and women.
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