Chartered ONE Issue 31

Page 12

LSCA Business

Social Care Levy and State Pension Lock An employee annual salary of

£30,000 Will pay an additional

£255pa with employer contributions increasing by

£265

An employee annual salary of

£50,000 Will pay an additional

£505pa with employer contributions increasing by

£515 An employee annual salary of

£80,000 Will pay an additional

£808pa with employer contributions increasing by

£818 12

Following recent speculation that National Insurance rates would be increased, the Government has now announced that a new Health and Social Care Levy will be introduced from April 2022, expected to boost funding for the NHS and social care by £36 billion over the next three years (although this is not formally ring-fenced). The 1.25% rise will initially be introduced as a rise in National Insurance for all working-age employees, employers and the self-employed, subject to the existing threshold levels. Dividend tax rates will also increase by 1.25% to help fund the package. The dividend tax will be legislated in the next Finance Bill and the government said that additional and higher rate taxpayers are expected to contribute over 70% of the revenue from this increase in 2022-23. From April 2023 it will be treated as a separate tax and will then also apply to those workers above state pension age. It was also announced that from October 2023, there will be a lifetime cap on care costs of £86,000, although not applicable to people already within the care system. Example An employee with an annual salary of £30,000 will pay an additional £255 per annum, with employer contributions increasing by £265. At £50,000 this becomes an increase of £505 for employees and £515 for employers, and at £80,000, £808 for employees and £818 for employers. A white paper on integrated health and social care will be released later this year setting out more detailed plans. The government has confirmed that the state pension will rise by 2.5% from April 2022, breaking the pension lock as a result of the impact of the pandemic.

Mark Kearsley

At present, the state pension is supposed to increase each year in line with whichever of the following is highest: • inflation (CPI) • the average wage increase • or 2.5% During the Covid pandemic, many people were earning less than usual due to the operation of the furlough scheme. As people have returned to full pay, this has been recorded as a large rise in average earnings, estimated 8% from May to July 2021. Under the existing triple lock rules, state pension would need to rise by a similar amount. For 2022/23 only, it will ensure the basic and new state pensions increase by 2.5% or in line with inflation, which is expected to be the higher figure this year. The lock will then be restored for the remainder of Parliament. In addition to those receiving basic and new state pensions, this will apply to those receiving standard minimum guarantee in pension credit and widows’ and widowers’ benefits in industrial death benefit.


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Articles inside

ICAEW - INFORMATION HUBS

1min
page 45

ANDY BOUNDS - CHRISTMAS QUIZ

3min
pages 42-43

OPUS

3min
page 44

DSG - OWNERS OF CRYPTOASSETS ASKED TO CONSIDER CGT

3min
pages 30-31

LIVERPOOL SOCIETY OF CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS CELEBRATE NEWLY- QUALIFIED ACCOUNTANCY TALENT

3min
pages 32-39

ANDREW LLOYD - DO PEOPLE REALLY WANT TAX CUTS IF THAT MEANS POORER PUBLIC SERVICES?

2min
pages 26-27

JAN MCCORD - HOW LOCKDOWN CHANGED MY LIFE

3min
page 25

DSG -UK BUDGET – AUTUMN 2021 A STRONGER ECONOMY FOR THE BRITISH PEOPLE

3min
pages 40-41

THE CHARTERED ONE BIG INTERVIEW NIGEL LANCELEY

4min
pages 22-24

LIVERPOOL SOCIETY OF CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS – EQUALITY, DIVERSITY AND INCLUSION

0
page 20

CHRIS WAINWRIGHT GENTLEMEN I GIVE YOU...

2min
pages 18-19

SMARTVAULT

2min
pages 16-17

DSG - SOCIAL CARE LEVY AND STATE PENSION BLOCK

2min
page 12

DSG -REDROW FOUNDER KEYNOTE SPEAKER AT LATEST DSG SPONSORED IOD EVENT

1min
page 13

NORTH WEST BUSINESSES OPTIMISTIC FOLLOWING CHALLENGES OF 2021

2min
page 14

DAVID CRADDOCK

9min
pages 9-11

ICAEW AND CIPFA - EXPLORING POTENTIAL FOR CLOSER WORKING

1min
page 15

REFLECTIONS FROM OUR EDITOR

1min
page 5

COODEN TAX CONSULTING ARE WE THER YET?

3min
pages 6-7

CHESTER TOWN MEETINGS

1min
page 2
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