All George Osborne articles
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News
Scrap ‘rotten’ taper altogether, former pensions ministers tell chancellor
Pressure is mounting on the chancellor to take action on NHS pensions, as two former pensions ministers on Wednesday called for the “fundamentally rotten” tapered annual allowance to be scrapped.
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Opinion
Pensions taper is bad medicine for the NHS and should be ditched
The sound of tiny violins can often be heard when the better off complain about yet another cut to their pensions tax relief.
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News
LGPS pools see opportunity in housebuilding push
Chairs of Local Government Pension Scheme asset pools have stated their willingness to provide capital for housebuilding in the UK, but insisted any real estate investments will be viewed through a financial, rather than a political, lens.
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News
Michael Johnson: Replace pensions tax relief with bonuses
In a bid to make pensions saving more progressive, the Centre for Policy Studies has recommended substituting tax relief on pensions for capped bonuses on individual and employers’ retirement contributions.
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News
Notts expands local property investment
The £4.9bn Nottinghamshire County Council Pension Fund has increased its commitment to local property investment. The fund has added £10m to its local property fund and has expanded the geographical area where it will invest.
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Opinion
How far have we come with LGPS infrastructure investment?
At the outset of the Local Government Pension Scheme pooling initiative, George Osborne’s Treasury expressed its disappointment at the average LGPS infrastructure allocation of just 1 per cent in England and Wales.
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Opinion
What effect will a cap on exit fees have on freedom and choice?
Freedom and choice has generated over 1.5m flexible payments totalling more than £9.2bn since April 2015. That sounds like a lot to me, even though there are 4m people aged over 55 who are eligible, so I doubt if many people have been inhibited by exit fees so far.
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News
Concerns over Lisa mis-selling remain as consultation closes
The Financial Conduct Authority’s consultation on rules for selling lifetime Isas will close on Wednesday, amid continued industry concern that the draft regulation will not do enough to stop inappropriate choice of products.
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News
Discrimination, indexation and tax relief's survival: Top law and regulation stories from 2016
Year in review: As if Brexit didn’t pose enough challenges, regulators, lawyers and two successive pensions ministers have had a lot on their plate in 2016.
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News
Draft Lisa rules attempt to prevent AE opt-outs
Providers of the lifetime Isa should warn savers that substituting their pension for the product will mean they lose out on employer contributions, draft rules published by the Financial Conduct Authority have proposed.
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Features
What the industry wants to see in the Autumn Statement
Autumn Statements became mini Budget announcements under the previous chancellor. Looking to the new regime, what advice does the industry have for Philip Hammond before he announces his first set of plans on November 23?
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News
Is the new Lisa bill signal or noise?
The government last week released its Savings (Government Contributions) Bill, ending speculation about the death of the lifetime Isa and raising questions about the future of pensions policy.
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Opinion
No more short notice, please
The recent ‘changing of the guard’ at Downing Street has led to a major reorganisation of the government as a whole. The relevance of its impact on pensions policy is potentially very significant indeed.
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News
Webb: New face at DWP will not loosen Treasury's grip on pensions tax
Philip Hammond’s appointment as chancellor of the exchequer is unlikely to see the Department for Work and Pensions regain control of pensions reform, according to former pensions minister Steve Webb.
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Opinion
A tale of two departments
Editorial: Many might have breathed a sigh of relief early this week, when Andrea Leadsom quit the race to lead the Conservative party and it was clear Britain would have a new prime minister a lot earlier than expected.
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Opinion
Why we need to empower the next generation
In Wales and the north, steelworkers are fighting for their pensions. But in the future, Britain’s hard-working young people may not even have pensions worth fighting for.
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Opinion
Altmann: Create a culture where it pays to save
Regular readers of this column will know that auto-enrolment and ensuring as many people as possible can look forward to a good private pension in retirement are a priority for me.
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Opinion
What does Iain Duncan Smith's resignation mean for pensions?
There was a big upset in Westminster over the weekend as former secretary of state for work and pensions Iain Duncan Smith resigned in protest over the chancellor’s latest round of benefit cuts.
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Features
Long-term saving solution continues to elude pensions industry
Missed by many amid the Budget’s pomp and circumstance, the summary of responses to the government consultation – ‘Strengthening the incentive to save’ – contains a resounding call for stability but no clear solution to the nation’s savings crisis.
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News
PiP calls on government to bridge infra gap
The Pensions Infrastructure Platform has called on the government to make UK infrastructure more appealing to investors, in an effort to address the mismatch between government hopes for infrastructure investment and schemes’ need for returns.