Terry - Somerset
Established Member
At age 60 a healthy individual can buy an annuity providing for some inflationary increases + a 50% pension to a surviving spouse at a cost of £100k for every £4500-5000 income.To be honest I don't know enough about finances to know all the pro's and con's, and I'm only using your post as an example of numbers.
So the statement I see often is the rich are too rich and the poor are too poor (I'm not suggesting you said this), which in many instances I agree with. But using your example of a consultant having £1.25million in a pension, surely they are part of the rich with too much money.
I don't know how you change this without the problem that you highlighted i.e. that they just retire early, but I certainly don't have pity for someone with £1.25million in their pension being hit slightly more on tax.
There are lots of posts on here mentioning how businesses will have to close or reduce in size to save costs, but isn't the entire point that people at the bottom are paid more and the people at the top should reduce their salaries. I looked at a building companies finances recently and the directors were all on £500K+ with the top people on £1m. Yet these are the people who will lament about having to reduce their workforce because the company can't afford it. Perhaps if they didn't take 10x or more of the lowest salaries then maybe they wouldn't have to.
I worked in a secondary school and the head teacher and deputy was on £150k and £100K respectively! I was Senior IT tech on £23k (in 2020). I was scrabbling around repairing computers with old parts and the like. If they both dropped £10k off their salary the school could have bought new computers for the entire school. How terrible they would have to be on £140k and £90k salaries...
For a consultant with £1.25m in their pension pot, this would generate an income of ~£60k pa before tax. Many would regard this as a very comfortable income - but for a high earning individual used to an income of £100k++ it is unremarkable.
If tax rules are a dis-incentive to work, we need to decide whether maintenance of the tax regime is more or less important than skilled staff. Particularly given the intention to increase NHS budgets it would be daft to lose these people to the health service.