Publication
Relief from relief: Making handling relief events easier and more collaborative
Relief events clauses are included as standard provisions of most technology implementation, outsourcing and services contracts.
United Kingdom | Publication | April 2022
HM Treasury has announced that planned payments to fix the “net pay anomaly” will be delayed by a year.
Low earners have to date missed out on 20% government top-ups to their pension contributions if they happen to be enrolled in pension schemes using a net pay arrangement. By contrast, low earners in schemes using relief at source receive the top-up. This so-called net pay anomaly predominantly affects women.
The Government announced in the 2021 autumn Budget that it would fix this issue and achieve equal outcomes by paying top-up amounts directly to affected individuals (i.e. low earners in schemes using net pay arrangements) for the tax year 2024/25 onwards. It intended to pay the first top-up amounts in 2025/26.
The Treasury now says that the timetable is being delayed due to practical obstacles such as complex IT changes being needed. The first top-up payments will still relate to pension contributions made in the tax year 2024/25 but are now likely to be paid a year later than planned, in 2026/27.
Publication
Relief events clauses are included as standard provisions of most technology implementation, outsourcing and services contracts.
Publication
In this edition, Amy Allen reports on the Law Commission’s “14th Programme of Reform” and its proposals to review commercial leaseholds, management of housing estates, ownerless land and deeds. Then, Amy and Jo Chattle provide a summary of Companies House’s new guidance on requesting access to trust information for an overseas entity.
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