Business Plus

Consider Master Trusts Ahead Of Auto-Enrolment

With Auto-Enrolment looming, employers should familiaris­e themselves with the pension options available to them, writes Stephen Gillick of Mason Hayes & Curran LLP

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Ireland operates the Exempt, Exempt, Taxed (‘EET’) system of pension taxation relief. This system means that both employer and employee contributi­ons are exempt from tax. It also means that the investment income and capital gains made by the pen-sion are exempt. Benefits are only taxed when the pension is in drawdown.

Employer contributi­ons to occupation­al pension schemes are fully deductible for corporatio­n tax purposes, up to certain limits. This can be useful for business owners who are also directors or senior employees of their companies. It is possible to use employer contributi­ons as a means of increasing pension contributi­ons beyond the individual agerelated limits.

COMPANY PENSION SCHEMES

Company pension schemes are typically set up as Defined Contributi­on (DC) schemes. This means that employer and employee contributi­ons are invested, and the proceeds are used to buy a pension come retirement. Company pension schemes must obtain Revenue approval to gain ‘exempt approved’ status, and must be registered with the Pensions Authority. Members of DC schemes will typically have several fund choices available to them, which can be selected according to risk appetite. Members can usually obtain access to the value of their fund whenever they choose.

MASTER TRUST

A company pension scheme can also be set up under a Master Trust, a DC scheme that can be utilised by multiple employers that are unrelated to one another. Master Trusts offer a profession­al trustee board, which typically takes the form of a corporate trustee. All of the functions of a pension scheme, such as administra­tion, investment and member communicat­ions, are dealt with by the provider.

Employers retain control of some aspects of their scheme, such as the level and frequency of contributi­ons and the method by which contributi­ons are paid. There is a financial benefit as well, with both employers and their employees benefittin­g from economies of scale.

There are two main factors that are likely to make Master Trusts a mainstay of the Irish pensions landscape:

• Auto-Enrolment, which led to a huge increase in the popularity of Master Trusts when it was introduced in the UK.

• The European IORP II directive, which was transposed into Irish law earlier this year.

Its prescripti­ve requiremen­ts will put pressure on smaller pension schemes, in terms of the regulatory burden and costs.

AUTO-ENROLMENT

This is a good time for employers to begin considerin­g a company pension scheme. Though the government has stated that Auto-Enrolment (AE) will be delayed until 2023, its introducti­on will require all employers to enrol certain staff in a pension scheme and to contribute to it.

The government has signalled some of the key aspects of Auto-Enrolment when it is eventually introduced. AE will use a defined contributi­on model: the state will make a contributi­on, as yet unspecifie­d, on behalf of each member, and employer contributi­ons will match those of their employees.

Some other features have been confirmed in principle and are subject to change. Amongst these is a proposed default contributi­on rate of 1.5% of qualifying earnings. It is proposed that this rate will increase by 1.5% every three years, leaving a maximum contributi­on rate of 6% at the end of the first 10 years of AE. Employers will have to match that contributi­on within an overall qualifying earnings threshold of €75,000.

Stephen Gillick is Partner and Head of Pensions at Mason Hayes & Curran LLP. For more informatio­n, visit MHC.ie

 ?? ?? Stephen Gillick, Mason Hayes & Curran LLP
Stephen Gillick, Mason Hayes & Curran LLP
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