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-   -   Pension National Insurance Contributions Retrospective Change to Opted-Out (https://www.pprune.org/military-aviation/592865-pension-national-insurance-contributions-retrospective-change-opted-out.html)

Well Travelled Nav 29th Mar 2017 17:36

Pension National Insurance Contributions Retrospective Change to Opted-Out
 
All,

Came across this today where from last April, changes to the NI rules, mean that the NI contributions we paid via our wages, for the duration of our service, are now classed as 'opted-out' payments. As a result, we are not entitled to a full state pension, at pensionable age.

https://www.change.org/p/all-veteran...etition-no_msg

TURIN 29th Mar 2017 17:44

Nasty!

Will they be demanding that you pay your employers increased contributions (3.4%) too as has happened with 'some' final salary pensions. :mad::mad:

MightyGem 29th Mar 2017 21:15

This is nothing new. We've always been "opted out" of the second state pension(SERPS/Additional State Pension). There's no date on this document, but it mentions a State Pension of £107, so it's some time ago.

https://www.ctp.org.uk/assets/document/417241

Also mentioned here on page 2:

AFPS contracted out from State Earnings Related Pension Scheme (SERPS)
https://equiniti.com/media/792325/20...newsletter.pdf

and here, in 2014:
I served my country but I've been told I won't get full state pension | This is Money

Pontius Navigator 30th Mar 2017 06:37

It is probably more important to check your spouses entitlement. Following the flag can be deleterious to her pension

radar101 30th Mar 2017 07:15

I find it interesting how, every year or so we get threads started which show that there is a gap in knowledge re pensions etc.


I served 16 years and then another 20 as a civil servant and it amazed me that full- career RAF mates knew little of the details of their pension, NI etc.- I suppose that is the reason for the "Financial Aspects of Resettlement" course.


In the present thread, The squodging together of basic pension + serps into one new pension has presented this false "injustice"


Lewradar


ps It also applies to Teachers, Civil Servants etc - all contracted out professions.

Bladdered 30th Mar 2017 07:45

I will have worked for 12 years after leaving the RAF to receive the full 'new pension' but I always knew that in the RAF I was 'opted out' of what used to be SERPS. My NI contributions were less than if I was opted in so as I say it will have taken another 12 years of being 'in' to get the full £155. This really is not new news but I am dismayed that this is not common news to those still serving and who may need to consider how best to fund their retirement.

Onceapilot 30th Mar 2017 08:27


Originally Posted by Bladdered (Post 9723776)
I will have worked for 12 years after leaving the RAF to receive the full 'new pension' but I always knew that in the RAF I was 'opted out' of what used to be SERPS. My NI contributions were less than if I was opted in so as I say it will have taken another 12 years of being 'in' to get the full £155. This really is not new news but I am dismayed that this is not common news to those still serving and who may need to consider how best to fund their retirement.

IMO it is new news, in that I think most of us were unaware of the implications of "contracting out" when we joined. Again, IMO this, and the changes to RPI linking should count as misrepresentation, much in the same way as misselling has been clobbered in other aspects of financial affairs. Why on earth would it be better for the individual to agree to a lower pension structure when joining a mandatory pension scheme? There was never any option given in respect of NI, in my experience.
I believe that "contracting-out" is a formal process. Perhaps Al R can advise how the MOD claim to have covered this?

OAP

Just This Once... 30th Mar 2017 09:32

A lot of the confusion comes from the DWP. If you ask them for a pension forecast with less than 10 years to retirement the answer is a firm 'No'. They direct you instead to the DWP online system that, once registered, will show you your NI record, any missing years and finally your current (how many years you have earned) and predicted (how many years you have to make-up the shortfall) state pension. Phew.

Except the answer it gives is wrong.

Inexplicably the online record does not take into account 'contracted out', well at least mine does not and I know I am not alone. It is entirely understandable that confusion reigns when you have a system will not give you a pension forecast until it is too late, whilst giving you online access to your own record which can be considerably in error.

This is a Government issue - they dictate my pay, pension, tax, NI, state pension forecast and online NI record. I have no control at all. I don't accept that I have received a discounted rate of NI either, or have put less into the NI pot. The removal of the NI cap on a % of our salary years ago means that higher earners pay considerably more NI than is otherwise required for a maximum state pension. As a case in point, my wife (contracted in) will receive more state pension benefits than I, but her annual NI bill is lower than mine.

Pay more, get less with a sprinkling of inaccurate forecasts.

Just This Once... 30th Mar 2017 10:12

I should add that since 2016 the Armed Forces are no longer 'contracted out' and we pay full NI.

Blacksheep 30th Mar 2017 12:25

I left in 1977 well before the second pension was introduced . I paid GPNI during my service and, as far as I am aware, the rate we paid was exactly the same percentage of our pay as that paid by civilians. There was one difference - our pay was much less than what a civilian aircraft engineer earned - presumably because we received 'free' food and lodgings.

For those who served from 1978 when SERPS began, there being no pension for a 12 year or less engagement, there is no "occupational pension" entitlement so how could anyone on such an engagement be considered "contracted out"?

ShyTorque 30th Mar 2017 13:13


Originally Posted by Pontius Navigator (Post 9723710)
It is probably more important to check your spouses entitlement. Following the flag can be deleterious to her pension

It can be. But your spouse can apply to have years spent accompanying you abroad taken into consideration. This affected my wife but she very recently "claimed back" three years worth of "lost" NI contributions.

Onceapilot 30th Mar 2017 14:04


Originally Posted by ShyTorque (Post 9724145)
It can be. But your spouse can apply to have years spent accompanying you abroad taken into consideration. This affected my wife but she very recently "claimed back" three years worth of "lost" NI contributions.

Do not get me started ShyTorque.. Within the last few years, my wife has had her state retirement qualifying age backdated by 8 years and, her previously fully qualified pension status, reduced by 6 years worth of payments to leave her short of full state pension. Why do we not hear much about this and, how come we let the pollies get away with it?:confused:

OAP

Chainkicker 30th Mar 2017 14:37

Have to say i'm with MG, Bladdered and R101 on this. Its not something new and has been in place since SERPS appeared (in 78 was it?) I heard about it around 20 years ago though must admit didn't pay much attention to pensions and the like back then. It could probably had done with being publicised a bit better though...

ShyTorque 30th Mar 2017 14:58

OAP, Last year my son spotted a small newspaper article about this and alerted his mother. There was no notification from HM Government as far as we know. Hopefully we now have her situation under control.

But both my state pension age and hers have been abated under the new rules; we both fall into the same dreaded age bracket.

Obviously, as a pilot, I can't continue to fly as single crew and must desist six years before I receive my state pension! Looks like I'll be relegated to collecting trolleys or shelf stacking at Tescos for six years. So much for being a professional... I don't expect to see any doctors or lawyers in this situation; they can keep their professional status for as long as they like.

Annoyingly, both my sister and my wife's can get their pension at the "old standard" age. because they are slightly older than we are.

Onceapilot 30th Mar 2017 15:36

Shy,
The Ladies pension age thing is real theft of around £58,000 per female. IMO, the very least the Gov should do is to count those extra years as NI paid and add them to the qualifying total of all ladies who were working age when the age change occurred. To those who say "suck it up, they can change the rules" I say, yes but the rules should be fair or they are bad rules. Wait till they increase the qualifying years level to 45+ years and, when they introduce means testing to state pension entitlement! Both coming, in around 2020 I predict! :yuk:

OAP

Fonsini 30th Mar 2017 16:31

It's interesting for me now having both an American and a British "future pension". Maybe this will provide some perspective.

With something like 20 years of full year NI payments in the British scheme I am currently entitled to something like 55% percent (it used to be 66% - they keep trimming it) of the full pension which is currently what £120 per week? leaving me with maybe £70 a week ish at age 67 (for me) assuming I never work in blighty again. Quite honestly that seems like a bad deal for all those years of payments.

On the other hand I have paid into the American scheme for only 16 years, and if the Social Security Administration is to be believed I am already entitled to $1,150 a month even if I stop work now, so roughly £885 per month in the US scheme compared to just £280 a month in the British scheme, and I can claim it at 62 in the US as opposed to 67. If I work for another 10 years it will almost double to over $2,000 a month.

My numbers are probably shaky but you get the general idea, the UK pension seems to involve an awful lot of paying in and very little paying out, hence me relying on nothing government based and saving as much as I can into private schemes (401ks, IRAs etc). Even so I will never reach my "recommended retirement amount" - I suspect that there will be a lot of people on both sides of the Atlantic who will be working a lot longer than they had originally planned and I get the distinct impression that government funds are running out in both countries.

Not intended to be controversial, just thought the perspective might be interesting.

Pontius Navigator 30th Mar 2017 16:52

Remember though, in UK, NI pays for much more than your pension. It is also funding some of the NHS bill.

Fonsini 30th Mar 2017 17:18


Originally Posted by Pontius Navigator (Post 9724318)
Remember though, in UK, NI pays for much more than your pension. It is also funding some of the NHS bill.

Just as with the US for Medicare (retiree's healthcare coverage) and Medicaid (55 million low income healthcare users). But yes, not to the extent of the single payer scheme coverage in the UK. The US is great while you are working, but terrible when retired or ill. It would also be true to say that most seniors still pay for additional healthcare insurance beyond the basic coverage offered by Medicare, so it's never a true "apples to apples" comparison.

My father was a government employee in the UK and never worried about retirement, he had a non-contrib works pension and his full state pension, and after retirement he and my mother actually saved money each month and wanted for nothing, all with minimal savings. I suspect that younger generations will find it more difficult.

vascodegama 30th Mar 2017 17:44

Blacksheep

If memory serves in the early 80s the SSC types were paying more NI because they were not part of the service pension scheme but presumably were part of the SERPs scheme for exactly the same reason.

What I don't know is what happened when people transferred, presumably the system made sure that you lost out both ways.

zedder 30th Mar 2017 18:07

If you want to see the detailed bad news, when you get onto the State Pension Forecast website and get your forecast, then select "how contracting out has affected your pension income". It will take you to a new page that will tell you were contracted out. It then talks about the:

Contracted Out Pension Equivalent (COPE)

Your workplace or personal pension scheme should include an amount of pension which will, in most cases, be equal to the additional State Pension you would have been paid. We call this amount your Contracted Out Pension Equivalent (COPE). Your COPE estimate is shown below.

The COPE amount is paid as part of your other pension schemes, not by the government. The total amount of pension paid by your workplace or personal pension scheme will depend on the scheme and on any investment choices.

In my case (28 years service) my COPE estimate is £90.53 a week. So I assume that if I supposedly achieve the £155.65 a week state pension, they will then deduct the COPE figure. Ouch!!


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