Home Business NewsChancellor retains triple lock pension in his autumn statement

Chancellor retains triple lock pension in his autumn statement

by LLB Finance Reporter
22nd Nov 23 12:57 pm

The Chancellor Jeremy Hunt has announced on Wednesday during his autumn statement that pension triple lock will remain.

This means that pensioners will get an increase to their allowances in 2024, as the chancellor says the triple-lock will be committed to in full.

This means that pensioners will see their pension rise by the highest of inflation, earnings, or 2.5%.

Hunt added that from April 2024 the full state pension will rise to 8.5% to ยฃ221.20 which is an increase of up to ยฃ900 per annum.

Hunt has maintained the triple lock in full, which means that the state pension will rise by 8.5% next April.

Sian Steele, Head of Tax at professional services and wealth management firm Evelyn Partners, said, โ€œThis will be very welcome to those receiving, or about to receive, the state pension at a time of rising living costs.

โ€œWith an election on the horizon, the political consequences of tinkering with the triple lock might have figured in the Chancellorโ€™s calculations. Whether the state pension can be increased in the same way over the long term alongside an ageing population is another question.

โ€œWith the inclusion of bonuses in the earnings element of the triple lock, many in the Treasury are probably lamenting a missed opportunity to save the public purse some extra outlay.

โ€œThe 8.5% hike now nailed on for April means the state pension will cost the Treasury ยฃ2billion more in 2024/25 than the Office for Budget Responsibility forecast at the Spring Budgetย  and that comes hot on the heels of this Aprilโ€™s bumper 10.1% state pension hike, which added ยฃ11 billion to Government spending in 2023โ€“24.

โ€œAdjusting down the prescribed rise for April to 7.8% – the rate of earnings growth excluding bonuses – would inevitably have attracted criticism, and might not have saved a huge amount for the public purse. But it would arguably have been quite a sensible alteration.

โ€œThe surprise is more that successive governments have allowed bonuses to be included in the calculation, as they are volatile and something that only a small proportion of the working population benefit from โ€“ and this yearโ€™s figure was particularly distorted by a one-off NHS deal. Itโ€™s also not clear why the inflation and earnings growth elements of the triple lock are taken from one month and three months respectively, rather than longer periods that would give a more stable and accurate picture.

โ€œOutside of an election year, this could be a relatively uncontroversial reform to the triple lock, as itโ€™s clear that demographic and life-expectancy trends will escalate costs to the Treasury from the state pension over the coming years.

โ€œFrom a tax point of view, this increase for the state pension takes it a step closer to the frozen annual personal income tax allowance, which means that a retiree will not need a great deal of private income in retirement โ€“ whether that is from a personal pension, investments or property โ€“ before they pay tax at theย  basic rate of 20%.

โ€œThe new flat rate annual state pension of ยฃ11,501 in the 2024/25 tax year, is just ยฃ1,069 short of the ยฃ12,570 tax-exempt allowance as it stands in 2023/24.โ€

Leave a Comment

You may also like

CLOSE AD

Sign up to our daily news alerts

[ms-form id=1]