Skip to main content
Normal View

Tax Yield

Dáil Éireann Debate, Thursday - 18 July 2013

Thursday, 18 July 2013

Questions (195)

Patrick Nulty

Question:

195. Deputy Patrick Nulty asked the Minister for Finance the amount of money that would be raised in a full year by confining tax relief to the standard rate of 20% in respect of pension contributions to occupational pension schemes, retirement annuity contracts and personal retirement savings accounts and confining tax relief for the public service pension related deduction to the standard rate of 20%; and if he will make a statement on the matter. [36745/13]

View answer

Written answers

I assume the Deputy is referring to individual pension contributions, the tax relief on which is allowed at the taxpayer’s marginal tax rate — the standard or higher rate of income tax as appropriate in each case. A breakdown of the cost of tax relief on employee contributions to occupational pension schemes is not available by income tax rate, as tax returns by employers to the Revenue Commissioners of employee contributions to such schemes are aggregated at employer level. An historical breakdown is available by tax rate of the tax relief claimed on contributions to personal pension plans — retirement annuity contracts and personal retirement savings accounts — by the self-employed and others, to the extent that the contributions have been included in the personal tax returns of those taxpayers.

There is, therefore, no statistical basis for providing definitive figures. However, by making certain assumptions about the available information, it is estimated that the full-year yield to the Exchequer from confining tax relief to the standard rate of 20% in respect of pension contributions to occupational pension schemes, retirement annuity contracts and personal retirement savings accounts and confining tax relief for the Public Service pension related deduction to the standard rate of 20% would be approximately €560 million. This estimate includes €90 million in respect of the Public Service pension related deduction. This estimate does not allow for possible behavioural changes that could arise from changes in the rates of relief.

Top
Share