Archive for March, 2010

Pension Transfer to Australia – What will happen with my State Pension?

Sunday, March 21st, 2010

Global QROPS Ltd offer expert advice on whether our clients should affect a pension transfer to Australia with their UK or company sponsored schemes. As part of our advice service, we also look at individual’s options for the UK State Pension.

An important decision has been reached, by the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) on 16th March 2010, as to the level of State Pensions paid to UK migrants living in Australia.

For migrants receiving their UK State Pension entitlement in Australia, there is no increase on the income paid to them. This stacks up unfavourably compared to someone, who has paid exactly the same UK National Insurance contributions, who has chosen to stay in the UK or migrated to another country, such as the USA or an European Economic Area (EEA) state.

Many appeals to the EHCR have been made, not just by UK state pensioners in Australia, but by those in Canada, New Zealand and South Africa too, citing that this is discriminatory.

Unfortunately for those appealing, the EHCR ruled (on 16th March 2010) that the UK Government were not discriminating as migrants had themselves chosen to live outside of the UK in countries or states without a reciprocal state pension agreement with the UK. Judges decided that the link with National insurance contributions paid was not an exclusive link to the level of UK state pension paid and that the ECHR had no jurisdiction to dictate on how the UK’s public funds were distributed.

Advisers at Global QROPS Ltd are more than happy to speak to clients regarding UK State Pensions as well as discussing issues regarding a private pension transfer to Australia.

UK State Pension Blow for Global QROPS Ltd’s Clients

Thursday, March 18th, 2010

Amongst our many updates regarding pensions, Global QROPS Ltd are keeping up to date with the appeal to the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR), by overseas pensioners, regarding the situation on the indexing of state pensions.

For  the past 8 years a battle has been fought by the many UK state pensioners living abroad in countries such as Australia, Canada, South Africa, Nigeria and New Zealand, over the fact that their UK state pension benefits are not indexed whereas people retiring in EEA countries or the USA (for example) still receive indexation on their UK state pension.

Unfortunately for the pensioners that do not receive indexation, the ECHR has ruled that the UK’s decision not to index their pension is ‘not discriminatory’. The EHCR have argued that migrants moved to economies and societies outside of the UK by choice. Furthermore, it is not the ECHR place to interfere in a political decision as to the redeployment of public funds.

This is a blow to many migrants and Global QROPS Ltd clients, who will continue to see their UK state pension paid at a flat rate throughout their retirement, but no doubt a relief for the UK Government who would have had to pay an estimated £500 million extra each year had the EHCR ruled in favour of the appeal.

The current UK pension is £95.25 a week with pensioners who retired as far back as the 1970’s receiving as little as £6 per week, without the increase.

Global QROPS Ltd latest on Gibraltar QROPS

Wednesday, March 3rd, 2010

Further to previous bulletins regarding the uncertainty surrounding Gibraltar as a suitable jurisdiction for Qualifying Recognised Overseas Pensions (QROPS), the Association of Pension Fund Administrators in Gibraltar are fairly positive that the dispute with the UK’s Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs (HMRC), surrounding QROPS, is close to being resolved.

According to the article in the FT Adviser, which quotes Global QROPS Ltd’s opinion on the subject, Gibraltar may not be far away from being re-instated as a jurisdiction.

Please see link which includes our comments:

http://www.ftadviser.com/FinancialAdviser/Pensions/News/article/20100218/1b77c72e-1a4f-11df-b0bd-0015171400aa/Qrops-dispute-coming-to-an-end-London–Colonial.jsp

The dispute that had led to the initial suspension of UK pension transfers to Gibraltar QROPS, surrounded the ‘zero rate’ of tax from pension payments in Gibraltar. This was not regarded as a ‘progressive’ rate of tax by HMRC thus putting into question the status of the Gibraltar as a suitable jurisdiction for QROPS.

Gibraltar has been working hard to satisfy the conditions that HMRC would like them meet in order to continue as a QROPS jurisdiction. This would be an immense relief to many transferring UK pension members who’s pension transfer may  have been left in limbo as a result of the suspension.

Global QROPS Ltd will up date our news items with any further details, as and when it is officially announced, that Gibraltar is back on track and that UK pension transfers to their schemes can commence.