Selasa, 14 Maret 2023

Budget: Pensions to get boost as tax-free limit to rise - BBC

Jeremy HuntPA Media

The total amount that workers can accumulate in their pension savings before paying extra tax is expected to be increased in Wednesday's Budget.

The final figure has not been confirmed, but people are expected to be able to save up to £1.8m over a lifetime, up from £1.07m currently.

The policy aims at stop people from reducing their hours or retiring early due to the tax charges.

Persuading workers to work for longer is part of UK plans to boost growth.

The chancellor could also increase the £40,000 annual cap on tax-free contributions to pensions, to £60,000.

It is expected millions could benefit from the rise, including those who have worked in the public sector for many years. There has been a particular focus on doctors and consultants - some of whom have retired early or reduced hours for pension tax reasons as the NHS has become increasingly stretched.

UK economic growth has flatlined in recent months and the Bank of England expects the UK to enter a recession this year. One of the main issues raised has been whether enough people who can work, are working.

Many industries have struggled to recruit workers, though job vacancies are falling. Earlier this year, Mr Hunt pledged to consider changes to encourage the over-50s who had taken early retirement during or after Covid to return to work, saying he "would look at the conditions necessary to make work worth your while".

Not everyone believes that boosting allowances is the best policy to meet these ends for the wider working population.

"Increasing them will reduce the damage they do, but even better would be a more thorough reform of how pensions are taxed," said Carl Emmerson, from the Institute for Fiscal Studies, a leading independent think tank.

"High earners with big pension pots do benefit from inappropriately generous tax treatment of pensions, but there are much better ways of restricting this than these crude limits."

What are pension allowances?

The so-called lifetime allowance is the total amount of money you can build up in a workplace defined benefit pension scheme and savings in a defined contribution pension before you face a further tax charge. The tax is levied on the excess over the allowance. The state pension is not included in the calculation.

The charge comes at certain times, such as when you start to draw a defined benefit pension. The allowance had been scheduled to remain at £1.07m until 2025-26.

It has been seen as a particular issue in the medical profession, leading to some doctors and consultants reducing their hours or retiring early from the NHS because they were in danger of breaching the allowance. They calculated that continuing to work was counterproductive for their finances.

The British Medical Association (BMA) has called the current lifetime allowance "punitive" and argued it had encouraged doctors to leave the profession.

The annual allowance is the amount you can build up each year, before facing a tax charge, and has been subject to much of the same debate.

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Types of pension explained

A defined contribution pension is when you build up a pot of pension savings which is invested. On retirement, you have various options.

One of those is to buy an annuity with all, or part, of that pot. Another option is to "drawdown" some of that pension while leaving the rest invested, known as flexible access.

A defined benefit pension is a bit different. It sees the amount you receive in retirement depend on how long you have been in the scheme and your salary during that time.

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A third change could also be made, again to encourage people to get back to work.

Under current rules, somebody who has already accessed their private pension after the age of 55 can subsequently only put £4,000 a year into their pension pot a year before facing an additional tax change. This is known as the money purchase annual allowance.

Again, the suggestion is that this is a disincentive to return to work, and the allowance could rise to its original level of £10,000.

Pensions providers have welcomed the expected change in the rules.

Dean Butler, at Standard Life, said: "The lifetime allowance has become unfit for purpose in recent years and has increasingly caught middle earners who have saved diligently over the years."

Any increase in the annual allowance, he said, would be of specific help to those with irregular earnings who were relying on making larger pension contributions later in their careers.

Tom Selby, head of retirement policy at AJ Bell, said: "The constant salami slicing of pensions allowances we have seen in recent years have not only reduced retirement savings incentives for Brits directly - they have also created unwieldy complexity which makes explaining the benefits of pension saving unnecessarily difficult."

Anyone drawing their pension is still liable to income tax as normal.

Debate over working numbers

The number of people not working has a broader effect.

A smaller workforce means less tax to pay for services like the NHS, and greater spending on benefits.

Since people on benefits generally have less money to spend than those in work, it also means less spending on the High Street.

That in turn is bad for businesses and how many people they want to employ.

In turn, that can affect how many jobs are available for those who are job hunting.

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2023-03-14 10:07:53Z
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Tom Tugendhat defends asylum bill but dodges questions on lack of legal routes - The Guardian

The security minister, Tom Tugendhat, has defended the government’s illegal migration bill, swerving repeated questions on whether there were any safe and legal routes for refugees from countries such as Iran to come to the UK.

The bill, which will mean asylum seekers who come to the UK via “illegal” routes being deported, has come in for harsh criticism from the former prime minister Theresa May and others, but Tugendhat said the government was determined to end the suffering caused by traffickers.

“This isn’t just about the crossing of the English Channel. This is about the thousands of people who are dying in the Sahara, who are dying in the Mediterranean, who are being trafficked by some of the most appalling people in the world, who have been exploited and turned into, frankly, cargo and commodity when they are just vulnerable people,” he said.

“And we need to focus on the fact that this trade is utterly horrific, and must end and this government is absolutely committed to doing what it can to end it.”

Tugendhat, the former chair of the foreign affairs select committee, avoided questions on what safe and legal routes were available to people wishing to seek asylum in the UK from countries such as Iran.

He said there were UN bodies operating in countries such as Turkey and Lebanon, which had “often supported that safe and legal route in different ways” but denied that the only route for a women’s rights activist from Tehran was via a boat across the Channel.

“Some are coming to rejoin their families on family visas and then claim asylum when they’re here. So it’s not simply by boats,” he said.

In a damning intervention during a parliamentary debate on Monday, May criticised the home secretary, Suella Braverman’s plan, warning that “anybody who thinks that this bill will deal with the issue of illegal migration once and for all is wrong”.

The bill says refugees who arrive in the UK without prior permission will be detained for 28 days and that asylum claims will be deemed “inadmissible” whatever the individual’s circumstances.

They will be removed either to their own country or a “safe third country”, such as Rwanda, if that is not possible.

May, who introduced the Modern Slavery Act in 2015 when home secretary, said the Home Office “knows genuine victims of modern slavery would be denied support” under the bill. “As it currently stands, we are shutting the door to victims who are being trafficked into slavery [in] the UK,” she said.

May said the bill would not stop illegal migration. “Whenever you close a route for migrants … the migrants and the people smugglers find another way.

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“Anybody who thinks that this bill will deal with the issue of illegal migration once and for all is wrong,” she said.

A number of Tory MPs abstained on the bill and others suggested they would have reservations in future – particular over a possible breach of international law and new provisions for the detention of children.

The former justice secretary Robert Buckland said he had been prepared to vote for the bill at second reading but that he had reservations about letting it progress further. He told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “I said that the issue relating to particularly women and children needs to be directly addressed.

“I do not support the detention of unaccompanied children or indeed the splitting up of families; that was a government policy that has been followed since 2010.

“And I think that those parts of the bill should be removed. Voting to allow the principle of a bill to go forwards is different from the detail of the bill and I would expect it to be scrutinised carefully.”

He added: “I’ve made it very clear that I do not support the detention of children or indeed women in those circumstances and that I think that the government risks looking as if it is guilty of ineffective authoritarianism, that’s something I do not support, and I made it very clear in the house last night.”

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2023-03-14 09:44:00Z
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Junior doctors blame health secretary for triggering strikes across England - The Guardian

Junior doctors’ leaders have blamed Steve Barclay for triggering their three-day strike this week by ignoring their concerns and being “dismissive” of their demands for improved pay.

Hospitals in England functioned effectively on Monday, the first day of the stoppage, with consultants – senior doctors – covering work usually done by junior colleagues. Many thousands of trainee medics refused to work, forcing hospitals to cancel outpatient appointments and operations.

The Hospital Consultants and Specialists Association (HCSA), one of the two medical trade unions whose members are striking until Thursday, launched a strongly worded attack on the health secretary’s handling of the dispute, which has been increasingly likely since June last year.

Dr Naru Narayanan, its president, said that successive governments had been guilty of “serial neglect” of junior doctors, despite the high dropout rate among them early in their careers, which has been linked to high levels of burnout and stress caused by working on the NHS frontline.

“The health secretary has wasted months. While this strike was brewing; instead of meeting with junior doctors’ unions to resolve the issues, he and the government have chosen to ignore them.

“This dismissive stance to very real grievances has driven the massive majorities of junior doctors voting to strike,” said Narayanan.

He added: “It’s clear that the only people responsible for this week’s strikes are ministers who over many years have believed they could get away with paying junior doctors less than they are worth, despite the worsening lack of doctors.

“Covid and the continued cap on increases at 2%, despite huge inflation, has finally pushed junior doctors over the edge.

“The roots of this strike lie in years of serial neglect of junior doctors by successive governments which have imposed a significant drop in real-terms incomes through below-inflation increases.”

Doctors joined picket lines across England on Monday and will do so again on Tuesday and Wednesday. The stoppage ends at 7am on Thursday.

The British Medical Association (BMA), the other union involved, also voiced its anger with Barclay. Both unions are seeking 26% “full pay restoration” for junior – or trainee – doctors to make up for the decline in the real-terms value of their salaries since 2008/09.

The BMA urged him to drop the pre-conditions he is insisting the BMA and HCSA accept before detailed pay negotiations can begin.

“These include the government wanting to keep discussions to future pay and limiting talks over 15 years of pay erosion to just a one-off bonus payment,” the union said.

Dr Rob Laurenson and Dr Vivek Trivedi, the co-chairs of the BMA’s junior doctors committee, said: “The fact that strike action is happening is 100% the fault of Steve Barclay, who shows no real commitment to resolving this dispute. An 11th-hour suggestion of talks is a facade.

“He is kicking the can down the road, delaying any meaningful discussion and failing to show any credible evidence of starting an honest conversation to end the dispute.”

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On Monday many consultants tweeted their support for their junior colleagues’ walkout.

“Night shift tonight in support of our fantastic junior doctors. They are the future and we need to pay them properly and look after them if we want them to stay in the NHS,” tweeted Dr Jim Down, an intensive care doctor.

“As consultants we told them they are supported 100%. We’ve produced a rota staffed by consultants to keep our service and patients safe. We had more volunteers than slots. We are all with you,” tweeted Dr Aaron Bell, a paediatric cardiologist in London.

Dr Claire Collins tweeted: “I hope our trainees know that when I say we’ve got their backs – I mean, we’ve got their backs. Consultants acting down for the next 3 days solid. Rotas covered. Do what you need to.”

Commenting on the strike, Sir David Nicholson, the ex-head of the NHS, who now chairs two health trusts in the West Midlands, tweeted: “I cannot believe that any competent government would allow this to happen.”

Barclay said it was “incredibly disappointing the British Medical Association (BMA) has declined my offer to enter formal pay negotiations on the condition strikes are paused”.

“I hugely value the hard work of junior doctors and urge unions to come to the negotiating table and cancel strikes which risk patient safety and impact efforts to tackle the backlog. I want to find a fair settlement which recognises the crucial role of junior doctors and the wider economic pressures facing the UK,” he added.

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2023-03-14 06:00:00Z
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Senin, 13 Maret 2023

Voting opens to select new SNP leader and Scottish first minister - The Guardian

Tens of thousands of Scottish National party members will cast their votes from Monday to select their party leader and Scotland’s next first minister, after a snap election forced by Nicola Sturgeon’s shock resignation.

Polling began at noon on Monday with Humza Yousaf, Scotland’s health secretary, vying to become the country’s first minority ethnic first minister, against Kate Forbes, the finance secretary, and Ash Regan, a former community safety minister and the outlier candidate.

Yousaf, 37, is regarded as Sturgeon’s preferred candidate after winning endorsements from the party’s most senior figures, including John Swinney, the outgoing deputy first minister; Stephen Flynn, the SNP’s Westminster leader; and roughly half of Sturgeon’s cabinet.

The SNP’s first open leadership contest for nearly 20 years has been marked by an unprecedented level of infighting over the party’s track record and attacks on several of Sturgeon’s most cherished policies, particularly from Forbes and Regan.

In the most significant development, Yousaf and Forbes both told SNP members it could take some years to build up sufficient support for independence to make it safe to stage a second independence referendum.

Forbes, 32, who would be Scotland’s youngest first minister, launched a remarkable attack on Yousaf’s record as a minister in the first live TV debate, accusing him of significant failures while he was transport secretary, justice secretary and latterly health secretary.

Forbes, an observant member of the socially conservative Free Church of Scotland, had already had a tempestuous start to her campaign after disclosing she did not support same-sex marriage, would not fight to overturn a UK government block on Sturgeon’s changes to gender recognition laws, and did not believe children should be born outside marriage.

However, a number of polls of ordinary voters and SNP voters found Forbes is the most popular of the three candidates; smaller polling samples of SNP members, which were not demographically representative, found Yousaf and Forbes were essentially neck and neck.

In a statement to mark the start of polling, Yousaf had a dig at Forbes. “Inclusivity, equality and respect for everyone” were central to the SNP’s recent successes, he said. “We cannot afford to have a leader who pulls us off that progressive path.”

Forbes said opinion polling showed she commanded confidence across the electorate. “No one can accuse me of not delivering, of bending under pressure or being unprincipled,” she said.

Over the weekend, Yousaf sought to attract hardline independence activists in the party who may be attracted by Regan’s pledge to repeatedly use elections as substitute referendums.

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He suggested he could call a snap Holyrood election to force the UK to negotiate, but only if popular support for independence was consistently high; SNP ministers say privately that would mean at least 60% support for a long period.

The election is being carried out using the multi-choice single transferrable vote system, which means that if Yousaf fails to win the contest on first-choice votes, Forbes could win in the second round if Regan’s supporters make her their second choice.

Uncertainties about how many SNP members may vote have grown after the Mail on Sunday reported at the weekend that only 78,000 people were eligible to vote, well below the 104,000 membership figure reported officially by the party last year.

The voting lasts for two weeks, with the final result due to be announced on Monday 27 March.

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2023-03-13 13:45:00Z
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Rishi Sunak faces growing Tory revolt over controversial small boats bill - Evening Standard

R

ishi Sunak faced the threat of a Tory revolt on Monday over his deeply controversial “small boats” bill.

The Prime Minister’s energy tsar Chris Skidmore said he would not vote for the legislation which even the Government’s own lawyers accept may be in breach of international law.

Ahead of the Illegal Migration Bill’s Second Reading, former energy minister Mr Skidmore tweeted: “I am not prepared to break international law or the human rights conventions that the UK has had a proud history of playing a leading role in establishing.

“I will not be voting for the bill tonight.”

Other senior Tories who have voiced concerns over the legislation include former Cabinet ministers David Davis, Sir Robert Buckland, and Simon Hoare, chairman of the Commons Northern Ireland Committee who is urging the PM to include legal and safe asylum routes to Britain in the bill so it is “tough and humane”.

It comes as the BBC announced Gary Lineker would return to Match Of The Day on Saturday after he was taken off air over his tweets criticising the government’s migration policy.

In a statement released on Monday, BBC Director General Tim Davie said: “Gary is a valued part of the BBC and I know how much the BBC means to Gary, and I look forward to him presenting our coverage this coming weekend.”

The Illegal Migration Bill will have its second reading in the House of Commons at 5.30pm on Monday.

Live updates

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Calls for Prime Minister to sack BBC chairman

Liberal Democrats leader Ed Davey has called for Rishi Sunak to “do the right thing” and sack BBC chairman Richard Sharp.

In a tweet Mr Davey said: “The BBC has made the right decision on Gary Lineker - now it’s time for Rishi Sunak to do the right thing and sack Richard Sharp.

“The BBC needs a proper independent chair not a Johnson acolyte.”

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Tory MP Chris Skidmore ‘not voting for bill tonight'

Conservative MP Chris Skidmore has said he will not vote for the Illegal Migration Bill when it goes to the Commons for its second reading later on Monday.

The backbencher, who is standing down at the next general election, tweeted: “I am not prepared to break international law or the human rights conventions that the UK has had a proud history of playing a leading role in establishing.

“I will not be voting for the bill tonight.”

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Gary Lineker’s son shares his pride on Twitter

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Downing Street ‘pleased’ Lineker row has been resolved

Downing Street has said it is “pleased” that the row between the BBC and Gary Lineker has been brought to an end.

While they refused to say whether the Prime Minister has confidence in BBC director general Tim Davie, a No10 spokesman said: “We are pleased that this situation has been resolved and that fans will be able to watch Match Of The Day as normal this weekend.”

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BBC surrendered in Gary Lineker row, says former executive

Former BBC news executive Sir Craig Oliver said asking Gary Lineker to return as host of Match Of The Day was a “capitulation" by the corporation.

The ex-controller of English news at BBC Global News also said the BBC is “always going to be a political football in British politics” and needs to “stand up and be clear”.

Sir Craig, who was later the Downing Street communications chief when David Cameron was prime minister, also told BBC News: “I think what's happened here is Gary Lineker 1 - BBC credibility nil.

“The reality is the BBC today has announced it will have a review of its social media guidelines. In fact, it needs a review of how it handles crisis like these."

Sir Craig said the corporation has been in a position where it was “slow to react", made the “wrong choice" when it asked Lineker to step back from his presenting role, which led to other BBC sports staff refusing to do their shows and "chaos" in the programming schedule before reversing course.

“I think it's a total mess," he added.

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No10 refuses to be drawn on whether PM has confidence in BBC chairman

Downing Street has refused to say whether the Prime Minister has confidence in Tim Davie following the Gary Lineker row, stressing that the choice of BBC director-general was a matter for the corporation.

“The director-General is appointed by the BBC and it's a matter for them,” said a No10 spokesperson.

“I'm simply pointing to the fact that he's appointed by the BBC and it's a matter for them,” the spokesman added when pressed by reporters.

Asked about the Prime Minister's position on the licence fee, the spokesman said: “We remain committed to the licence fee for the rest of the current charter. But we've been clear that the BBC's funding model faces major challenges due to changes in the way people consume media.

“And it's necessary to look at ways to ensure long-term sustainability."

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BBC Board says time is right for social media guidance review

The BBC Board has said in a statement that it “welcomes the fact that the executive has reached an agreement following the disruption of the weekend”.

It added: “Impartiality is a cornerstone of the BBC. We believe this is the right time to look at the clarity of the BBC’s social media guidance and how it is applied.

“We will support the executive in its continuing work to ensure the organisation delivers world-class, impartial content for all audiences.”

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Lineker refuses to answer questions as he leaves his home in London

Gary Lineker refused to answer questions from reporters as he left his home in Barnes, south-west London on Monday morning after his return to the BBC was announced.

Taking his dog out for a walk, the Match Of The Day host told reporters: “I’ve already said what I’m going to say on Twitter.

PA

“If I say anything more now it just encourages people to doorstep me.”

Mr Lineker refused to respond when he was asked: “Do you stand by what you said?”, “Have you won?”, “Is this a victory for common sense?” and “Has Tim Davie apologised to you personally?”.

PA

As photographers took pictures, he said: “Right that’s enough – you’ve got your pictures”.

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2023-03-13 15:28:53Z
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Swansea: 'Major incident declared' after house collapses in suspected gas explosion - Sky News

A major incident has been declared after a house collapsed in a suspected gas explosion, the leader of Swansea County Council has said.

Cllr Rob Stewart also tweeted that it is "not known at this time if there are any injuries or fatalities".

South Wales Police and Mid and West Wales Fire Brigade are at the incident in Morriston, Swansea, and are appealing for people to avoid the area.

In a statement, South Wales Police say they were called just after 11.20am on Monday morning to reports of an explosion at a property on the junction of Clydach Road and Field Close in Morriston.

Mid and West Wales Fire and Rescue Service say crews from Morriston, Swansea West, Neath, Gorseinon and Port Talbot were called to an incident in Morriston at 11.20am, following "several reports" of a gas explosion.

Sky News understands that the Welsh Ambulance Service are also in attendance.

South Wales Police have declared a major incident.

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2023-03-13 13:00:16Z
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HSBC buys Silicon Valley Bank UK for £1 in last-minute rescue for tech firms - City A.M.

HSBC has acquired Silicon Valley Bank UK

HSBC has announced this morning it is buying the stricken UK arm of Silicon Valley Bank, providing a lifeline for tech firms who had feared losing access to their deposits.

The global giant emerged as a ‘white knight’ late last evening – against competition from the Bank of London and an Abu Dhabi investment fund – and this morning Mark Kleinman reported they had moved into pole position.

The bank confirmed the £1 acquisition of Silicon Valley Bank UK to markets this morning.

“This acquisition makes excellent strategic sense for our business in the UK. It strengthens our commercial banking franchise and enhances our ability to serve innovative and fast-growing firms, including in the technology and life-science sectors, in the UK and internationally,” CEO Noel Quinn said this morning.

It means that firms who banked with SVB UK will now be able to access their funds as normal.

The Bank of England said this morning that “the Bank and HMT can confirm that all depositors’ money with SVBUK is safe and secure as a result of this transaction. Silicon Valley Bank’s business will continue to be operated normally by SVBUK. All services will continue to operate as normal and customers should not notice any changes.”

HSBC will not take on any of the obligations of SVB UK’s parent bank in the US, which collapsed after a ban run.

The bank’s failure had been described as a potentially extinction-level event for the UK’s tech sector.

“We welcome SVB UK’s customers to HSBC and look forward to helping them grow in the UK and around the world. SVB UK customers can continue to bank as usual, safe in the knowledge that their deposits are backed by the strength, safety and security of HSBC. We warmly welcome SVB UK colleagues to HSBC, we are excited to start working with them,” Quinn continued.

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2023-03-13 07:09:03Z
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