The Daily Telegraph - Saturday - Money

Everything that is wrong with new UK Isa

The new saving product will only affect those already tucking away £20k a year and complicate­s the existing system, reports Madeleine Ross

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The Chancellor is very committed to getting savers to invest more in British companies. So committed, in fact, that he introduced a range of measures in Wednesday’s Budget focused on ensuring that Britons do just that.

Reforms will make it easier for pension funds to invest in British companies. Jeremy Hunt also confirmed that defined contributi­on and local authority pensions will have to declare the breakdown of their asset allocation­s internatio­nally.

But the key policy is that savers will be given an extra £5,000 annual Isa allowance if they invest in British stocks. The UK Isa will “channel more investment into UK equities”, Budget documents explain, and alongside the British Savings Bond, a three-year fixed rate from, National Savings & Investment, forms the bulk of the offering for savers in this year’s announceme­nt.

But consultati­on documents make it clear just how far away the new UK Isa is and how many questions there are to be answered before it is implemente­d.

Analysts said the benefit of the new type of Isa would be a “rounding error” and that forcing savers into a narrower range of stocks would make it more difficult to mitigate risk.

Others said that its success would depend entirely on its take-up and that it was a further complicati­on to the originally simple Isa regime.

Investment platform AJ Bell suggested that a saver consistent­ly investing £5,000 in a tracker over a decade would have earned £30,000 more by putting the money in non-UK funds.

Here, The Telegraph explores the problems with the new “UK Isa” – as well as when it might be introduced.

WHAT IS THE NEW UK ISA?

The UK Isa will be a new type of Isa. It is not yet clear which platforms will offer it, but savers can expect that household names will be encouraged by the Government to participat­e in its developmen­t.

The key difference between a UK Isa and a normal cash or stocks and shares Isa is that it must be invested in UK companies. “The main objective for the UK Isa is to support a culture of investment in the UK and to give people the opportunit­y to invest and benefit from the UK’s vibrant capital markets and high-growth companies,” the consultati­on document reads.

ONLY A FEW WILL BENEFIT

The Chancellor announced that there would be an additional £ 5,000 Isa allowance for those investing in the new UK Isas.

Savers can already save £20,000 a year tax-free in Isas. They will be able, from April, to open as many cash or stocks and shares Isas as they like, as long as they don’t go over the total limit. Lifetime Isas ( Lisas), which are topped up by the Government and must be used for either buying a first home or retirement, alongside some limited other options, have their own £4,000 annual limit, which forms part of the overall £20,000 allowance.

Savers can, of course, save outside of Isa wrappers, but those who hold enough to earn more than £1,000 in interest annually if they are a basic rate taxpayer, or £500 if they are a higher rate taxpayer, will pay tax on the interest they earn. Additional rate payers receive tax bills for all the interest they earn.

It isn’t clear whether savers will be able to use the rest of their Isa allowance, which sits at £20,000, in their UK Isa, or if that will have to be put into other Isas. But many commentato­rs said that savers would be likely to maximise their existing holdings before looking to open a UK Isa, meaning that the change would only affect the very highest earners.

Brian Byrnes, at investment platform Moneybox, said: “It is unlikely the UK Isa will deliver real benefit to the vast majority of retail investors. The fact is that with a very small minority of investors currently able to max out the current £20,000 tax-free limit, the additional £5,000 allowance will likely solely benefit a small group of wealthier investors who are able to take advantage of it.”

Michael Summersgil­l, chief executive of investment platform AJ Bell, said: “A tiny minority of people max out their £20,000 Isa allowance each year, but these are the only ones that will see any benefit from the additional UK Isa allowance. In the context of the £2 trillion-plus UK stock market, any additional investment generated by these investors through the UK Isa will be a rounding error.”

The chief executive said that 50pc of the money his customers hold in stocks and shares of Isas is already invested in UK assets, so the new allowance would have a limited impact on consumer behaviour.

WHAT WILL I BE ABLE TO DO WITH MY UK ISA?

While it is clear that money held in a UK Isa must be invested in British assets, there are a number of questions about what it means to be “supporting a culture of investment” in the country.

The Government consultati­on on the UK Isa asks a number of questions, including whether ordinary shares in UK incorporat­ed companies that are listed in the UK should be included.

It also asks whether corporate bonds and gilts should be eligible, and whether there are investment­s that are already permitted for other Isas that should be included.

The Government wants to prohibit the use of the extra £5,000 for cash-like assets, and is seeking views on how to achieve this.

After announcing Isa changes in his Autumn Statement in 2023, savers will be allowed to open more than one Isa of the same type in a single tax year.

But the Government said not allowing this for the UK Isa would make them simpler and would make it less likely that investors would put in too much money in a single tax year.

Transfers from UK Isas into other types of Isa could also be banned, in order to stop savers opening one to use the new allowance and then immediatel­y moving the money elsewhere. Respondent­s are also asked whether investors should be allowed to transfer money from other Isas into the UK Isa, with the Government advising that there are not similar restrictio­ns for other types of Isas.

SIGNIFICAN­T DELAYS LIKELY

The Government has launched a consultati­on into the new type of Isa, which will close on June 6. It has confirmed that it will hold a number of “roundtable­s” – meetings – with the industry, in order to seek their views.

After the consultati­on closes, the Government will issue a response, but it has not set a date for this report.

The Treasury has acknowledg­ed that despite significan­t digitisati­on of the Isa reporting regime to HMRC in the past year, platforms will need time to update their systems in order to offer the new UK Isa.

While it was less than six months between the announceme­nt of significan­t changes in November’s Autumn Statement and their implementa­tion in April, that is no guarantee that providers will be able to move as quickly again. So it seems unlikely that the UK Isa will be available in the next tax year.

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