Rachel Reeves deals massive blow to 3 million Britons with pensions raid | Politics | News


Rachel Reevesโ€™s ยฃ5 billion raid on pensions will leave nearly three million workers poorer in retirement, official figures have revealed. HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) estimates that around 2.9 million people will slash pension contributions once restrictions on salary sacrifice schemes take effect in 2029.

Of those, 2.2 million are higher-rate taxpayers, but strikingly 666,000 are basic-rate earners on less than ยฃ50,271 a year. The data, released via a Freedom of Information request submitted by former pensions minister Sir Steve Webb, expose the wide-reaching impact of the policy announced in the Chancellorโ€™s second Budget.

Under the changes, workers will face a ยฃ2,000 cap on pension contributions via salary sacrifice before National Insurance (NI) becomes payable. The Treasury expects the move to raise ยฃ4 billion, with employers footing most of the bill through higher NI contributions โ€” ยฃ3 billion of the total in 2029-30 alone.

This comes on top of the ยฃ25 billion employer NI raid unveiled in Chancellor Ms Reevesโ€™s maiden Budget, raising fresh concerns that the measures are becoming a stealth tax on jobs. Businesses are expected to recoup costs by offering smaller pay rises to staff.

Sir Steve Webb, now a partner at LCP consultants, told the Telegraph: โ€œThe Government has presented the changes to salary sacrifice for pensions as being a relatively painless way of cracking down on a tax break mostly enjoyed by the well-off.

“But these figures show that the effects of the policy will be far more damaging than had previously been admitted.โ€

The raid comes less than a month after a major government-commissioned review warned that 15 million people are under-saving for retirement, with middle earners, women and the self-employed most at risk.

Sir Steve criticised the lack of โ€œjoined-up governmentโ€, noting that one arm of policy urges greater pension saving while another actively discourages it.

He added: โ€œAt a time when the Government is running a major commission to tackle the issue of pension under-saving, it is shocking that a separate government policy will result in over 2.9 million workers cutting back on pension saving.

“Nearly 25 % of these are basic rate taxpayers.โ€

Separate analysis by the Institute for Fiscal Studies found one million households will be almost ยฃ900 a year worse off as a result.

Salary sacrifice allows workers to reduce their taxable pay in exchange for tax-free benefits, including pension contributions that avoid both income tax and NI. Employers also save on NI.

The policy is likely to fuel further business frustration with the Governmentโ€™s tax-raising approach and intensify debate over whether Labourโ€™s fiscal strategy is undermining long-term retirement security for millions of Britons.

Express.co.uk has approached HMT for comment.

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