Feature
posted 1 Nov 1999 in Volume 5 Issue 1
Benefit
Options for Carers
The welfare benefits system is now so complex that claimants will
not infrequently be presented with more than one option. Although the wrong
choice may involve loss of income, the Benefits Agency is no longer able to
give specific advice on a 'better off' problem. Advice lines, such as the disability
advice line (0800 882200) provide general advice about claiming, but do not
purport to assist individuals. If the wrong benefit is claimed there is no
guarantee that the claimant will ever subsequently be put on the right
track.
One
problem area is the interrelationship between invalid care allowance and the
state retirement pension. Let us consider the position of Mrs X, a married woman
who will shortly reach the age of 60. Her husband is 62. At 60 Mrs X will be
able to claim the category A retirement pension, based on her own contributions.
The full pension will be £66.75, assuming that she has an adequate contribution
record.
At
present Mrs X claims invalid care allowance of £39.95 per week in respect of her
daughter who is disabled. ICA carries a £50 per week earnings restriction, so
that, to retain benefit, Mrs X is only permitted to do limited part time work.
Like retirement pension, ICA is taxable as income.
If Mrs A receives state retirement
pension, her ICA will be adjusted in accordance with the overlapping benefit
rules. The manner of this adjustment will depend on the amount of retirement
pension which she receives. If the pension is the same as, or higher than her
ICA, her entitlement to ICA will cease. If her pension is less than her ICA, the
latter benefit will be paid in part to bring her income up to the normal ICA
level.
The
following examples illustrate how this rule operates in different
circumstances:
i)
If Mrs X has a full contribution record her retirement pension will amount to
considerably more than her ICA, and she will receive £66.75 per week. She should
also receive the (non-taxable) Christmas bonus of ?, and would be eligible for
winter fuel payments, if granted to pensioners.
ii) If Mrs X is entitled only to, say,
£25 a week retirement pension either because she has not paid sufficient NI
contributions, or because she has not acquired sufficient home responsibilities
protection, she will be paid an additional £14.95 per week by way of ICA, to
bring her income up to the prescribed level for ICA, which is £39.95 per week.
Again she should also receive the Christmas bonus and would be eligible for fuel
payments.
iii) If
Mrs X elects not to claim her state retirement pension at the age of 60, she
will continue to receive ICA of £39.95 per week, together with the Christmas
bonus, but she will not be entitled to winter fuel payments. However by
deferring entitlement to her pension Mrs X would make herself eligible for a
higher rate of pension at a later date. If, for example, she defers entitlement
for 5 years, until she is 65 (the maximum period allowed at present), she will
then receive 37% extra pension each week.
iv) When Mrs X's husband reaches 65,
and becomes entitled to his pension, she will be able to claim the category B
pension of £39.95 per week, based on his contributions. Obviously she might
elect to do so if her own pension were less than this. Her pension entitlement
and her ICA entitlement would then be at the same level, and the overlapping
benefit rules would give precedence to the pension payment. Accordingly Mrs X
would lose entitlement to ICA.
v) Loss of ICA for Mrs X would mean
that her daughter might benefit financially. If she were claiming income support
she would become entitled to the severe disability premium (at present £39.75
per week) when her mother ceased to claim ICA. In effect, therefore, there would
be a trade-off between mother and daughter. By extension, the position would be
the same if Mrs X were to claim a full pension at age 60, because the
overlapping benefit rules prevent payment of ICA, although underlying
entitlement continues.
One overriding consideration is the fact that during the whole period of
entitlement to ICA before the age of 65, National Insurance credits are awarded.
Consequently, if at present Mrs X has a contributions deficit, she will be able
to build up her pension by continuing to claim ECA.
John Newth FCA, FTII, FIIT, ATT,
Deputy Editor, Taxation Magazine
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