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Pension Provisions

Dáil Éireann Debate, Thursday - 24 January 2013

Thursday, 24 January 2013

Questions (74)

Eric J. Byrne

Question:

74. Deputy Eric Byrne asked the Minister for Finance the reason a person has been advised that their pension is being reduced for their lifetime by more than €6 per week, which they can ill afford; the person's spouse is in a nursing home to which they contribute more than half their pension; if there are any exceptions to the pension levy; to whom those exceptions apply; the way a person may apply for such an exemption; and if he will make a statement on the matter. [3694/13]

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Written answers

The pension fund levy imposes an annual stamp duty of 0.6% on the market value of assets under management in pension schemes approved by the Revenue Commissioners under Irish tax legislation for each of the years 2011 to 2014. The valuation date for determining the market value of the assets is, in general, 30 June of each year and the due date for payment is 25 September. I confirmed in my Budget 2013 Speech that the levy will not be renewed after 2014. The moneys raised from the pension fund levy are being used to pay for the Government’s Jobs Initiative introduced in May 2011. The measures introduced as part of the Jobs Initiative include a new 9% VAT rate on certain activities, the halving of the lower rate of PRSI and small amounts of additional current and capital expenditure.

The implementation of a jobs and growth strategy is a key priority of the Government. The measures announced in the Jobs Initiative are aimed at assisting in employment generation – providing opportunities for those who are out of work, to restore public morale and confidence in the economy and encourage spending by consumers.

The chargeable persons for the levy are the trustees or other persons (including insurance companies) with responsibility for the management of the assets of the pension schemes or plans. The payment of the levy is treated as a necessary expense of a pension scheme and the trustees or insurer, as appropriate, are entitled, where they decide to do so, to adjust current or prospective benefits payable under a scheme to take account of the levy. It is up to the trustees to decide whether and how the levy should be passed on and who should be impacted and to what extent, given the particular circumstances of the pension schemes for which they are responsible. I cannot intervene in this process in respect of the pension fund referred to in the details supplied with the question or other pension funds.

However, the legislation also includes safeguards aimed at ensuring that benefits payable, either currently or prospectively to any member, are adjusted in such a way that the reduction in value of those benefits shall not exceed 0.6% of the market value of the assets accounting for the scheme’s liabilities to that member.

I am advised by the Revenue Commissioners that there are two exceptions to the requirement to pay the levy provided for in the governing legislation (section 125B of the Stamp Duties Consolidation Act 1999).

The first exception provides that the levy will not apply to the assets of occupational pension schemes in respect of employees whose employment is or was wholly exercised outside the State. In other words the levy does not apply to the extent that a pension scheme is intended to provide retirement benefits outside the State.

The second exception provides that the levy will not apply where the trustees of a scheme have passed a resolution to wind-up the scheme and where the business in respect of which the scheme was established is insolvent.

I am conscious of the concerns of pension scheme members about the impact of a levy in circumstances where the pensions sector, in common with other sectors in our economy and society, is finding the current economic and financial environment very challenging. However, much of the value of pension funds is attributable to the rolled up value of generous tax reliefs that pension savings have historically been granted and continue to receive. The purpose of the levy is to improve the economic environment by providing the means to encourage job creation in areas of our economy most likely to deliver that employment quickly.

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