DeVere founder urges Cameron to "leave pensions alone"

DeVere Group’s founder and chief executive, Nigel Green, has urged the Tories to be bolder with taxation policy and to leave pensions alone.

Related topics:  Retirement
Rozi Jones
8th May 2015
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If David Cameron wins a slender majority, Mr Green said he "would urge the PM and his colleagues to be bolder with taxation policy."
 
Predicting the Conservatives’ effective majority, he said:

“Cutting income tax, as has been promised, is a step in the right direction as hardworking people will get to keep more of their money to provide for their families. It reduces a barrier to aspiration.
 
“Similarly, it must now keep its pledge on inheritance tax – which was meant to only ever be paid by the wealthiest in our society and which has been pulling more and more of the already ‘Squeezed Middle’ into its net.
 
“IHT is universally regarded as one of the most despised taxes as it is, essentially, a form of double taxation, and passing on a decent legacy to our loved ones is a very human instinct.
 
“However, in an increasingly globalised world, more must now be done to remain tax competitive in the world of business.
 
“This is perhaps particularly true within the financial services sector. The government must be aware of a real and present threat of endless current and proposed fiscal raids.
 
“After eight increases in four years of the bank levy introduced by George Osborne, the bank bashing must end.”

On pensions, Nigel Green, deVere Group’s CEO said:

“It can be expected that there will be a temptation by the newly elected MPs to ‘review’ the pensions landscape. As contributions are subsidised by taxpayers, politicians think that they have an inherent right to continually tinker with pensions.
 
“This must not happen. Pensions must now be left alone. More changes will do more harm than good as it could add further layers of complexities and further impede the appetite for saving.
 
“In short, if pensions once again become a political football, the move could undermine what should be a relatively simple concept: saving for one’s retirement. This would affect both individuals’ retirement ambitions and the country’s long-term, sustainable economic growth.
 
“In the last five years, savers, retirees and the pension industry have seen mammoth changes to the state pension, public sector pensions and company pensions, with the recently rolled out pension reforms capping off a monumental amount of change.”

For investors, Mr Green said that David Cameron’s slender majority in the Commons outcome will be met with an immediate sigh of relief, but added that ‘now is the time to think more globally’.
 
Mr Green comments:

"This might be the calm before the storm.
 
“The prospect of an in-out referendum of Britain’s EU membership has gone from risk to a reality. Since this is likely to take place in several years’ time, this could lead to numerous years of ongoing uncertainty – something the markets are allergic to – and, in response, investors need to take precautions against a fall in the value of UK assets.
 
“They can do this by increasing their exposure to overseas investments.
 
“With many UK investors lacking geographical diversification, favouring a home bias, this should be a wake-up call to start a much-needed rebalancing to increase their exposure to international stocks, bonds and maybe property.  Now is certainly the time to think more globally.”

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