A reader recently asked the question above.
The draft
Regulations to implement the public sector exit payment cap don’t (yet)
help us to know when the cap will come into force (they currently say it will come into force on XXX...)
They do
reveal that, for those local government workers whose total cost of
departure (including “strain” on the pension fund for the cost of an unreduced
pension) where an exit payment restriction would otherwise prevent immediate
retirement on an unreduced pension on redundancy or efficiency, amendments to
the LGPS Regulations will result in the member paying for the removal of this
restriction. This could be either by paying the excess amount in full,
suffering an ongoing reduction to their pension or a combination of the two.
Hymans
Robertson (to whom I am indebted for the information above) speculate that
the Government published the draft Regulations before the primrary legislation
under which they are intended to be made had received Royal Assent because they
want to avoid delay – which suggests that there could be an early
implementation of the exit payment cap.
Given that
the Enterprise Bill made
it from the House of Lords to the Commons with section 35 (which gives the
power to make the Regulations) intact, that the Committee
stage in the Commons is scheduled to conclude by 25 February, and that the
Regulations will require only an affirmative vote of both Houses of Parliament
to become law, it might be unwise to bank on any significant delay.
It’s worth
remembering not only that this exit payment cap will
not only hit “fat cats” but also that the Taxpayers
Alliance driven agenda of vilifying high payments in public service is,
essentially, an attempt to justify spending cuts.
The truly
wealthy, those whose interests drive the current onslaught upon our public
services and our trade unions pay themselves to excess out of the (largely
untaxed) profits of the corporations they control.
2 comments:
But the bill has to receive Royal Assent.
Or is this done by affirmative vote?
Does anyone know exactly what is included in the £95k cap?
Would it only be strain on the fund and redundancy?
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