Why Britain’s huge debts make Isas more attractive than pensions

By Phil Oakley Jun 28, 2012

Phil Oakley

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We’re only a couple of months into the new financial year, yet the latest figures in government borrowing suggest that the public finances are already set to be worse than expected this year.

This shouldn’t be a huge surprise. The UK economy is back in recession, tax receipts are weaker and government spending remains too high.

This looks like the start of a trend; a trend that will have big implications not only for your savings but for how you save for the future.

Let me explain.

The trouble is that the government’s deficit reduction plan lacks credibility. It is based on 'pie in the sky' forecasts that the economy will start roaring ahead again.

We’re in recession now. Yet the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) thinks that by 2015, the economy will be growing at 3% per year (adjusted for inflation – see chart below), or just over 5% in nominal terms.

OBR real GDP growth forecasts (%)

OBR real GDP growth forecasts

This looks like wishful thinking to me.

Apparently, the growth will be driven by people spending more. But how are people who are already finding it hard to make ends meet, going to find the money to spend even more?

The OBR also assumes that people will run down their savings too. Yet lots of people actually need to save more and pay off debt, not deplete their savings further.


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Businesses are unlikely to come to the rescue. Levels of business investment remain low. Despite having very healthy finances, many firms just don’t see enough projects where they can get good returns.

The outlook for exports isn’t brilliant either. Many overseas customers are facing their own problems, which means they probably won’t be buying more of what we sell.

To me, this means that the current forecasts to eliminate most of the deficit (the annual overspend) by 2016-17 look fanciful. Yet assuming that tax receipts will be just over 36% of money GDP, the OBR predicts that this will nearly happen.

Year Tax receipts (£bn)Spending (£bn)Deficit (£bn)Extra debt (£bn)
2011-12 570.4 696.4 -126 -126
2012-13 591.5 683.4 -91.9 -217.9
2013-14 622.5 720 -97.5 -315.4
2014-15 658.4 733.5 -75.1 -390.5
2015-16 692 744 -52 -442.5
2016-17 735.3 756.3 -21 -463.5

But if GDP fails to meet forecasts - as I think it will - then tax receipts are going to be lower than the Treasury currently expects. Another thing to highlight here is that government spending isn’t going down, it’s going up. We could be left with an even bigger mess than we are now.

Taxes will have to go up

All the talk of cutting government spending is clearly nonsense. A rising debt interest bill and high welfare payments are offsetting cuts made in government departments.

The government is stuck in a rut. The state’s contribution to the economy is just too big at nearly 50%. But while slashing the size of the state is the right thing to do for our long-term wellbeing, it just makes the economy worse in the short term.

Unlike in the 1990s, when the Tory government balanced tax rises and spending cuts to get the public finances back in shape, the current plan is based more on cuts. This will have to change. Taxes are going to have to go up too.

This seems like madness. The economy needs tax rises like a hole in the head. They will suck demand out of the economy, as people will have less disposable income to spend. This is true, and just highlights the mess we are in. It also tells you why the Bank of England is printing money and may have to print a lot more.

Go for Isas instead of pensions

The bleak economic outlook probably means that investment returns are unlikely to be good. You have to wonder how long the bond markets will lend to us for ten years at 1.7%? A bond market crash remains the biggest threat to our wealth, but that’s a story for another day.

If taxes have to go up to raise more income for the government, then it may erode the attractions of personal pensions. The generous tax relief for higher rate taxpayers could well be unsustainable. It represents an easy gain for a government looking for cash.

But there’s a more serious issue to consider. While you’ve been given tax relief on your pension contributions, the income in retirement has been subject to income tax.

If you are 10, 20, or even 30 years from retirement, you’ve got to wonder whether the tax you will pay on your retirement income then will be set at a higher rate than most pensioners pay now.

And if you think this might happen, then it makes sense to put more of your retirement savings in an Isa. Why? Because although you don’t get any tax relief on the money you put in, the money you take out is tax-free. So whatever happens to income taxes between now and when you retire, your money will be shielded.

The Isa allowance is now quite generous. Let’s hope that governments don’t start meddling with that too. But a couple can now save £22,560 (£11,280 each) between them each year with allowances increasing by Consumer Price Index inflation each year. That should allow most people to have a chance of building a decent retirement fund.

We’ve liked the simplicity of Isas at MoneyWeek for sometime now (you can read more about why here: Pensions vs Isas: what’s the best way to save for retirement?). The prospect of higher tax rates in the future is just another reason to like them.

Comments (18)

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  • 1. JREwing

    (28 June 2012, 04:58PM)  Complain about this comment

    The bond market cannot crash in the short term if the central bank remains ready and willing to buy bonds with printed money. Some day that scheme will meet its Waterloo but that day is still some way off.

  • 2. Toothy

    (29 June 2012, 10:50AM)  Complain about this comment

    The bond market cannot crash.
    Who owns the most treasuries now? The BoE while they are able to buy there can be no crash.
    They are unconstrained so ultimately will control yields.

  • 3. Joe Cooper

    (29 June 2012, 10:52AM)  Complain about this comment

    Does it make really ISAs more attractive than pensions? Maybe the future tax position is a consideration but pensions are still extremely attractive, particulalry in relation to the death benefits they provide.

  • 4. Longterm

    (29 June 2012, 10:54AM)  Complain about this comment

    Phil

    Do you know waht happens to your ISA tax shelter if you decide to emmigrate? Can you retain the ISA and the tax-sheltered benefits in the UK and move abroad for work?

    Cheers

  • 5. John

    (29 June 2012, 10:57AM)  Complain about this comment

    And what happens if (actually, it's more like when) a future government changes the tax rules regarding your annual ISA allowance?!?! Let's face it, it's more likely to be reduced than it is increased. Also, with currency debasement the name of the game nowadays the £11,280 allowance will not reflect the same purchasing power as the year's pass by.

    It's a nice idea you've presented, but it negates several key factors.

  • 6. j barrows

    (29 June 2012, 12:23PM)  Complain about this comment

    The bond market might not nominally crash if the BoE is buying up all the bonds with fake money, but in that case who in the hell would want to hold sterling? - it will morph into a currency crash. The BoE has backed itself into a corner through its ridiculous actions and is playing a dangerous game.

  • 7. Frank

    (29 June 2012, 12:39PM)  Complain about this comment

    The numero uno consideration for future income planning is INFLATION, I know that currently it is low(ish) but even at these levels compound out the effect of inflation for 20 years and you are running to crawl with almost every fiat money priced investment, add some tax on top and you are lucky not to stand still, never mind going backward. Since 1961 the cumulative cost of inflation in sterling is 1,340%. Whatever you buy now to spend in 20 or 30 years MUST be inflation proof.

  • 8. mic

    (29 June 2012, 03:32PM)  Complain about this comment

    the authors sums are misleading in that only half ish ?- ISA allowance is available to save in cash the remainder is for ''investing'' only ?
    How many times have we read in M'weeks pages how the value of investments from say 10--20 yrs ago are below to- days value -BEFORE inflation- so ''investing'' is quite a gamble for most to say the least.
    And inflation at the best of times will make significant inroads into savings- we are now in the worst of times with Govts. having nothing but inflation to erode debt.
    On present dire performance of this Govt. Labour will return in 3 yrs time...........and will need increased taxes to fund welfare , social and state spending. They will be heavily in hock to the Unions as well.
    Good luck everyone!!

  • 9. Prince Myshkin

    (29 June 2012, 03:43PM)  Complain about this comment

    @Longterm,
    I have taken advice from a chartered accountant regarding this matter. I have been informed that; if one becomes non-resident, one may keep an established ISA and continue to actively manage its contents, but one cannot continue to contribute to the ISA nor set up a new ISA until once more a UK resident.
    (If any tax advisors contest this advice then please do not hesitate to correct me!)

  • 10. Event

    (29 June 2012, 06:00PM)  Complain about this comment

    With a percentage of my ISA in a physical Gold ETF since launch and the ballance in blue chips with a good divs & a record of increasing them, my ISA has served & is serving me better my pensions.
    Not without some calamities however, BP, Aviva, Cable & wireless (yield 17.5pc!!!)

  • 11. Event

    (29 June 2012, 06:04PM)  Complain about this comment

    Futher to my last the ISA is self select so the whole allowance is invested.

  • 12. 4caster

    (30 June 2012, 12:07AM)  Complain about this comment

    So the advice of this article is to
    1. Shun the immediate tax relief on pension contributions, which is at your marginal rate, i.e. the highest rate you pay, and
    2. Trust all future governments to maintain tax-free withdrawals of income and capital from an ISA, for as long as you live.
    Eventually the government will merge income tax with national insurance contributions, an income tax in all but name (except that retired people do not pay them), into a single tax. At present all parties insist that they will exempt pensioners from the national insurance element of the combined tax. Who believes that?
    Claim the tax relief on pension contributions while it lasts, that's what I say. Only two things are certain in life: death and taxes.

  • 13. Maurice

    (30 June 2012, 12:35AM)  Complain about this comment

    This article and discussion is best described as "Pi**ing in the Wind. "

    Anyone of relevant age expecting such conventional provisions to secure their financial (or physical) future after the mathmatically inevitable collapse of FIAT currency (yes that includes Sterling) and its associated institutions and the relocation of wealth to the East is deluded.

    Money Week has gone far too mainstream, promolgating this destructive BS. Shame on you.

    Forget this irrelevant nonsense. Buy gold and food and pray (if so inclined) for your future survival.

  • 14. MCAT

    (30 June 2012, 11:19AM)  Complain about this comment

    The article is based on an assumption that the income both building up in ISAs and when withdrawn will never be taxed.
    Would I plan my retirement on that basis?
    After all, governments are notorious about changing taxes.

  • 15. StevieG

    (30 June 2012, 04:02PM)  Complain about this comment

    I was going to make a comment buit 4caster has already done it.

  • 16. NRob

    (02 July 2012, 12:44PM)  Complain about this comment

    Labour took £6b a year out of private pensions, Tory's continue to do so. My pension gone from £45k to £13k per year as a result. What is to stop any future government taxing ISAs when they feel like it, Never say Never !!!!!

  • 17. Event

    (02 July 2012, 06:56PM)  Complain about this comment

    The above comments do not take into account that should tax be applied the ISA can be cashed for its full value. Try that with a pension which currently forces one to buy an annuity which you are stuck with.
    Maurice makes a good point & provides the solution.
    The concept of our fiat currency collapsing is not new (1970's 25pc in a single year) total collapse is unlikely because since the currency's were decoupled from Gold the paper is one gigantic interest free loan to the government which it can welsh on via inflation.
    Gold could be the solution, (They can't print it) but you cannot sit on your butt. When inflation takes off gold will be just behind it so the gold percentage in the ISA (physical ETF) would need to be dramatically increased.
    Here's hoping I am playing it correctly.

  • 18. Longterm

    (03 July 2012, 12:33PM)  Complain about this comment

    @Prince Myshkin

    Many thanks for this information. I was hoping this would be the case. I'll look into it further as well.

    Cheers

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