This petition was submitted during the 2019-2024 parliament

Petition Make the NHS Pension scheme tax-unregistered

The NHS pension scheme should be ‘tax un-registered’, so the annual allowance and lifetime allowance don’t apply. The tax bills resulting from annual pension growth can leave senior staff choosing to take on LESS work to reduce their tax bill - work they would have otherwise been willing to do.

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If the Government made the scheme tax-unregistered (as in the Judiciary Pension Scheme) then senior staff will surely be more willing to undertake extra clinics, extra operating lists and contribute to the reduction in waiting times which have grown significantly since the pandemic.

It is perversely punitive that staff who undertake additional sessions can be faced with a tax bill of more than what they earned for those sessions.

This petition is closed This petition ran for 6 months

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Government responded

This response was given on 10 August 2022

The Government has no plans to make the NHS Pension Scheme a tax unregistered scheme. This would not benefit the vast majority of members, who would lose tax relief and a tax-free lump sum.

Read the response in full

The Government has no plans to make the NHS Pension Scheme a tax unregistered scheme. A tax unregistered scheme would remove tax relief on pension contributions, which is a valuable benefit designed to incentivise retirement saving.

Pensions tax relief is one of the most expensive reliefs in the personal tax system. In 2019/20, income tax relief on total contributions and National Insurance relief on employer contributions for pension savings cost the Exchequer £61 billion, with around 60% of relief being claimed by higher and additional rate taxpayers.

The annual and lifetime allowances restrict the cost of tax relief and ensure the incentive to save is targeted across society.

The unique circumstances of judicial appointments meant that it was necessary to reform their pension arrangements. Judges are not able to work in private practice after taking up office, and many judges take a significant pay cut to join the judiciary.

The combination of these factors is why the Government introduced a reformed judicial pension scheme.

The vast majority of NHS Pension Scheme members are able to build their pensions tax-free. Therefore, a tax unregistered pension arrangement would not benefit the vast majority of NHS Pension Scheme members, as it would mean that they lose tax relief on their contributions. An unregistered scheme would also mean that members lose the benefit of a tax-free lump sum of up to 25% of the value of their pension on retirement.

For members who incur an annual allowance charge, the Scheme Pays facility is a proportionate means of meeting the charge without needing to find funds upfront. On that basis, the Government does not plan to introduce a tax unregistered scheme for the NHS.

Department of Health and Social Care

MPs publish report on NHS and social care workforce

On Monday 25 July, the House of Commons Health and Social Care Committee published a report on workforce recruitment, training and retention in the NHS and social care.

The Committee's report calls on the Government to implement a range of measures to help recruit more NHS and social care staff and address factors that lead to them leaving their roles.

In its report, the Committee makes a series of recommendations to the Government, including calls to:

  • Publish workforce projections for the NHS and social care, including an assessment of whether enough staff are being trained to meet future demand
  • Introduce a new bursary scheme for nursing students
  • Reform the NHS pension scheme to prevent senior staff from reducing their hours or retiring early

Alongside its report, the Committee has also published a separate report by a panel of independent experts brought together by the Committee to examine what progress has been made on key Government commitments on the health and care workforce. The independent panel has rated the Government's progress in this area as "inadequate".

What is the Health and Social Care Committee?

The Health and Social Care Committee is a cross-party group of MPs that look into the work of the Department for Health and Social Care and its associated public bodies, including NHS England.

The Health and Social Committee is a select committee.

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