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Wikipedia

National Insurance

National Insurance (NI) is a fundamental component of the welfare state in the United Kingdom. It acts as a form of social security, since payment of NI contributions establishes entitlement to certain state benefits for workers and their families.

Introduced by the National Insurance Act 1911 and expanded by the Labour government in 1948, the system has been subjected to numerous amendments in succeeding years. Initially, it was a contributory form of insurance against illness and unemployment, and eventually provided retirement pensions and other benefits.[1]

Currently, workers pay contributions from the age of 16 years, until the age they become eligible for the State pension. Contributions are due from employed people earning at or above a threshold called the Lower Earnings Limit, the value of which is reviewed each year. Self-employed people contribute partly through a fixed weekly or monthly payment and partly on a percentage of net profits above a threshold, which is reviewed periodically. Individuals may also make voluntary contributions to fill a gap in their contributions record and thus protect their entitlement to benefits.

Contributions are collected by HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC). For employees, this is done through the PAYE (Pay As You Earn) system along with Income Tax, repayments of Student Loans and any Apprenticeship Levy which the employer is liable to pay.[2] National Insurance contributions form a significant proportion of the UK Government's revenue, raising £145 billion in 2019-20 (representing 17.5% of all tax revenue).[3]

The benefit component includes several contributory benefits, availability and amount of which is determined by the claimant's contribution record and circumstances. Weekly income and some lump-sum benefits are provided for participants upon death, retirement, unemployment, maternity and disability. In order to obtain the benefits which are related to the contributions, a National Insurance number is necessary.[4]

History edit

 
A 1940 contribution card for an employed woman.

The current system of National Insurance has its roots in the National Insurance Act 1911, which introduced the concept of benefits based on contributions paid by employed people and their employer. William Martin-Smith was issued with the First NI number A1.[5] The chosen means of recording the contributions required the employer to buy special stamps from a Post Office and affix them to contribution cards. The cards formed proof of entitlement to benefits and were given to the employee when the employment ended, leading to the loss of a job often being referred to as being given your cards, a phrase which endures to this day although the card itself no longer exists.[6]

Initially there were two schemes running alongside each other, one for health and pension insurance benefits (administered by "approved societies" including friendly societies and some trade unions) and the other for unemployment benefit which was administered directly by Government. The Beveridge Report in 1942 proposed expansion and unification of the welfare state under a scheme of what was called social insurance. In March 1943 Winston Churchill in a broadcast entitled "After the War" committed the government to a system of "national compulsory insurance for all classes for all purposes from the cradle to the grave."[7]

After the Second World War, the Attlee government pressed ahead with the introduction of the Welfare State, of which an expanded National Insurance scheme was a major component. As part of this process, responsibility passed in 1948 to the new Ministry of National Insurance. At that point, a single stamp was introduced which covered all the benefits of the new Welfare State.

Stamp cards for class 1 (employed) contributions persisted until 1975 when these contributions finally ceased to be flat-rate and became earnings related, collected along with Income Tax under the PAYE procedures. Making NI contributions is often described by people as paying their stamp.[8]

As the system developed, the link between individual contributions and benefits was weakened.

The National Insurance Funds are used to pay for certain types of welfare expenditure and National Insurance payments cannot be used directly to fund general government spending. However, any surplus in the funds is invested in government securities, and so is effectively lent to the government at low rates of interest. National Insurance contributions are paid into the various National Insurance Funds after deduction of monies specifically allocated to the National Health Services (NHS). However a small percentage is transferred from the funds to the NHS from certain of the smaller sub-classes. Thus the four NHS organisations are partially funded from NI contributions but not from the NI Fund.[9] Less than half of benefit expenditure (42.1%) now goes on contributory benefits, compared with over 65% in 1978–79 because of the growth of means-tested benefits since the late 1970s.[10]

An actuarial evaluation of the long-term prospects for the National Insurance system is mandated every 5 years, or whenever any changes are proposed to benefits or contributions. Such evaluations are conducted by the Government Actuary's Department and the resulting reports must be presented to the UK Parliament. The most recent review was conducted as at April 2020, with the report being published two years later.[11]

Contributions edit

The contributions component of the system, "National Insurance Contributions" (NICs) are paid by employees and employers on earnings, and by employers on certain benefits-in-kind provided to employees. The self-employed contribute partly by a fixed weekly or monthly payment, and partly on a percentage of net profits above a certain threshold. Individuals may also make voluntary contributions, in order to fill a gap in their contributions record and thus protect their entitlement to benefits. Contributions are collected by HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) through the PAYE system, along with Income Tax and repayments of Student Loans and Postgraduate Loans.

People in certain circumstances, such as caring for a child, caring for a severely disabled person for more than 20 hours a week or claiming unemployment or sickness benefits, gain National Insurance credits which protects their rights to various benefits.[12]

National Insurance is a significant contributor to UK government revenues, with contributions estimated to comprise 18% of total revenue in the 2019/2020 financial year.[13]

Contribution classes edit

 
A British 1948 National Insurance stamp, once used to collect contributions to the scheme.

National insurance contributions (NICs) fall into a number of classes. Class 1, 2 and 3 NICs paid are credited to an individual's NI account, which determines eligibility for certain benefits - including the state pension. Class 1A, 1B and 4 NIC do not count towards benefit entitlements but must still be paid if due.

Class 1 edit

Class 1 contributions are paid by employers and their employees. In law, the employee contribution is referred to as the 'primary' contribution and the employer contribution as the 'secondary', but they are usually referred to simply as employee and employer contributions.

The employee contribution is deducted from gross wages by the employer, with no action required by the employee. The employer then adds in their own contribution and remits the total to HMRC along with income tax and other statutory deductions. Contributions for employees are calculated on a periodic basis, usually weekly or monthly depending on how the employee is paid, with no reference to earnings in previous periods. Those for company directors are calculated on an annual basis, to ensure that the correct level of NICs are collected regardless of how often the director chooses to be paid.

There are a number of milestone figures which determine the rate of NICs to be paid. These are the Lower Earnings Limit (LEL), Primary Threshold (PT), Secondary Threshold (ST) and Upper Earnings Limit (UEL), though often the PT and ST are set to the same value. The cash value of most of these figures normally changes each year, either in line with inflation or by some other amount decided by the Chancellor. The PT is normally indexed to inflation using the CPI, while other thresholds remain indexed using the RPI.[14]

  • On earnings below the LEL, no NICs are paid because no benefits accrue on earnings below this limit.
  • On earnings above the LEL, up to and including the PT, employee contributions are not paid but are credited by the government as if they were (enabling certain low-paid workers to qualify for benefits).
  • On earnings above the LEL, up to and including the ST, employer contributions are not paid.
  • On earnings above the PT/ST, up to and including the UEL, NICs are collected at a rate which is determined by a number of factors:
    • Whether the employee has reached the age at which State Pension becomes payable
    • Whether the employee is a married woman paying reduced-rate contributions. This facility was abolished on 11 May 1977 but women who were already paying these contributions at that time were allowed to opt to continue to do so for as long as they remained married and in employment
    • Whether the employee is an ocean-going mariner or deep-sea fisherman.
    • In the case of the employer contribution, whether the employee is aged under 21 or is an apprentice aged under 25.
  • On earnings above the UEL yet another set of rates apply, this time depending only on whether the employee has reached the age at which State Pension becomes payable or is an ocean-going mariner or deep-sea fisherman
Table letters edit

As indicated above, the rates at which an individual and their employer pay contributions depend on a number of factors. Consequently, there are many possible sets of employer/employee contribution rates to allow for all combinations of the various factors. HMRC allocate a letter of the alphabet, referred to as an 'NI Table Letter', to each of these sets of contribution rates. Employers are responsible for allocating the correct table letter to each employee depending on their particular circumstances.

Each tax year, HMRC publish look-up tables for each table letter to assist with manual calculation of contributions, though these days most of the calculations are done by computer systems and the tables are available only as downloads. In addition, HMRC provide an online National Insurance Calculator.[15]

Class 1A edit

Class 1A contributions were introduced from 6 April 1991, and are paid by employers on the value of company cars and certain other benefits in kind provided to their employees and directors, at the standard employer contribution percentage rate for the tax year. Class 1A contributions do not provide any benefit entitlement for individuals.

Class 1B edit

Class 1B contributions were introduced on 6 April 1999 and are payable by employers as part of a PAYE Settlement Agreement (an arrangement whereby the employer meets the tax liabilities on certain benefits). Class 1B contributions are paid at the same rate as Class 1A contributions and do not provide any benefit entitlement for individuals.

Contribution rates edit

Contribution rates are set for each tax year by the government.

The general rates for the tax year 2023/24 between 6 January and 5 April 2024 are shown below.[16] For those who qualify for the mariners rates, the employee rates are as shown below and the non-zero employer rates are 0.5% lower than those shown below.

Employees
Weekly salary Standard Reduced Over retirement age
Up to £123 a week n/a n/a n/a
£123.01 to £242 a week 0% 0% 0%
£242.01 to £967 a week 10% 3.85% 0%
Over £967 a week 2% 2% 0%
Employers
Weekly salary Standard Reduced Over retirement age Under 21 / apprentice under 25
Up to £123 a week n/a n/a n/a n/a
£123 to £175 a week 0% 0% 0% 0%
£175.01 to £967 a week 13.8% 13.8% 13.8% 0%
Over £967 a week 13.8% 13.8% 13.8% 13.8%
Class 1A & 1B 13.8% 13.8% 13.8% 13.8%

Class 2 edit

Class 2 contributions are fixed weekly amounts paid by the self-employed until 5 April 2023.[17] They are due regardless of trading profits or losses, but those with low earnings can apply for exemption from paying and those on high earnings with liability to either Class 1 or 4 can apply for deferment from paying. As of January 2020, self-employed National Insurance Contributions (NICs) will be categorised as Class 2 when profits are between £6,365 and £8,631.99 a year. If a self-employed worker earns £8,632 or more a year they will be categorised as Class 4. Class 2 contributions are charged at £3.00 per week and are usually paid by direct debit.[18] While the amount is calculated to a weekly figure, they were typically paid monthly or quarterly until 2015. For future years, class 2 is collected as part of the tax self-assessment process. For the most part, unlike Class 1, they do not form part of a qualifying contribution record for contributions-based Jobseekers Allowance, but do count towards Employment and Support Allowance.

Class 3 edit

Class 3 contributions are voluntary NICs paid by people wishing to fill a gap in their contributions record which has arisen either by not working or by their earnings being too low.

Class 3 contributions only count towards State Pension and Bereavement Benefit entitlement. The main reason for paying Class 3 NICs is to ensure that a person's contribution record is preserved to provide entitlement to these benefits, though care needs to be taken not to pay unnecessarily as it is not necessary to have contributions in every year of a working life in order to qualify.[19]

Class 4 edit

Class 4 contributions are paid by self-employed people as a portion of their profits.[17] The amount due is calculated with income tax at the end of the year, based on figures supplied on the SA100 tax return.

Contributions are based around two thresholds, the Lower Profits Limit (LPL) and the Upper Profits Limit (UPL). These have the same cash values as the Primary Threshold and Upper Earnings Limit used in Class 1 calculations.

  • No class 4 NICs are due on profits up to and including the LPL.
  • Above the LPL, up to and including the UPL, class 4 NICs are paid at a rate which can vary but has been 9% for several years.
  • Above the UPL, class 4 NICs are paid at a second rate, which has been 2% for several years[20]

Class 4 contributions do not form part of a qualifying contribution record for any benefits, including the State Pension, as self-employed people qualify for these benefits by paying Class 2 contributions.

NI credits edit

People who are unable to work for some reason may be able to claim NI credits (technically credited earnings, since 1987[21]). These are equivalent to Class 1 NICs, though are not paid for. They are granted either to maintain a contributions record while not working, or to those applying for benefits whose contribution record is only slightly short of the requirements for those benefits. In the latter case, they are unavailable to fill "gaps" in past years in contribution records for some benefits.

Benefits edit

The benefit component comprises a number of contributory benefits of availability and amount determined by the claimant's contribution record and circumstances. Weekly income benefits and some lump-sum benefits to participants upon death, retirement, unemployment, maternity and disability are provided.

Current benefits edit

Benefits for which there is a contribution condition:

Former benefits edit

Historic benefits for which there was a contribution condition:

National Insurance number edit

To administer the National Insurance system, a National Insurance number is allocated to every child shortly after their birth when a claim to Child Benefit is made. People coming from overseas have to apply for a NI number before they can qualify for benefits, though holding a NI number is not a prerequisite for working in the UK. An NI number is in the format: two letters, six digits and one further letter or a space.[22] The example used is typically QQ123456C. It is usual to pair off the digits - such separators are seen on forms used by government departments (both internal and external, notably the P45 and P60).

National Insurance and PAYE Service edit

National Insurance contributions for all UK residents and some non-residents are recorded using the NPS computer system (National Insurance and PAYE Service). This came into use in June and July 2009[23] and brought NIC and Income Tax records together on one system for the first time.

The original National Insurance Recording System (NIRS) was a more archaic system first used in 1975 without direct user access to its records. A civil servant working within the Contributions Office (NICO) would have to request paper printouts of an individual's account which could take up to two weeks to arrive. New information to be added to the account would be sent to specialised data entry operatives on paper to be input into NIRS.

NIRS/2, introduced in 1996, was a large and complex computer system which had several uses. These included individual applications to access or update an individual National Insurance account, to view employer's National Insurance schemes and a general work management application. There was some controversy regarding the NIRS/2 system from its inception when problems with the new system attracted widespread media coverage.

Due to these computer problems, Deficiency Notices (telling individuals of a possible shortfall in their contributions), which had been sent out on an annual basis prior to 1996, stopped being issued; the Inland Revenue took several years to clear the backlog. As a result, many customers were unaware whether they had incomplete years of contributions towards their State Pension.

Contribution rates – employees edit

As noted above, the employee contribution was a flat rate stamp until 1975. After this, the rates have been as follows:[24][25]

Year Lower band Upper band Above upper band
1975–1976 N/A 5.5% N/A
1976–1978 N/A 5.75% N/A
1978–1979 N/A 6.5% N/A
1979–1980 N/A 6.75% N/A
1980–1981 N/A 7.75% N/A
1981–1982 N/A 8.75% N/A
1982–1989 N/A 9% N/A
1989–1994 2% 9% N/A
1994–1999 2% 10% N/A
1999–2003 0% 10% N/A
2003–2011 0% 11% 1%
2011–2022 0% 12% 2%
2022–2023 0% 12%[a] 2%[b]
2023–2024[c] 0% 12% 2%
2024– 0% 10% 2%

On 7 September 2021, the government announced an increase of NI rates by 1.25 percentage points for the 2022–23 tax year, breaking its 2019 manifesto promise. From 2023, a new health and social care levy charged at the 1.25% rate would be introduced with NI rates reverting to their previous rates.[26] This move was reversed by new chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng effective 6 November 2022.[27]

In the early 2000s the lower threshold for employee contributions was aligned with the standard personal allowance for Income Tax but has since diverged significantly, as illustrated in the following table.

The upper limit is currently set at the figure at which the higher rate of Income Tax becomes chargeable for a person on the standard personal allowance for Income Tax in all parts of the UK except Scotland (which can set its own level for the tax threshold, but not for the NI upper limit).

Year NI Employee Threshold Income Tax Allowance Charge to NI only
2007-8 £5,205 £5,225 £20
2008-9 £5,465 £6,435 £970
2009-10 £5,725 £6,475 £750
2010-11 £5,725 £6,475 £750
2011-12 £7,235 £7,475 £240
2012-13 £7,599 £8,105 £505
2013-14 £7,755 £9,440 £1,685
2014-15 £7,956 £10,000 £2,036
2015-16 £8,060 £10,600 £2,540
2016-17 £8,060 £11,000 £2,940
2017-18 £8,164 £11,500 £3,336
2018-19 £8,424 £11,850 £3,426
2019-20 £8,632 £12,500 £3,868
2020-21 £9,500 £12,500 £3,000
2021-22 £9,568 £12,570 £3,002
2022-28 £9,880[d]
£12,570
£12,570 £2,690
£0

For 2015-16 there was therefore up to £304.80 payable by someone who has not reached the point where they are liable for Income Tax. This has risen to £352.80 for 2016–17, to £400.32 for 2017–18, to £411.12 for 2018-19 and to £464.16 for 2019–20. This fell to £360 for 2020–21.

The current Government's manifesto in the 2019 General Election promised to restore the parity between the NI and Tax thresholds by the end of their first term in office. The limits were harmonised on 6 July 2022.

The limits and rates for the following tax year are normally announced at the same time as the Autumn budget made by the Chancellor of the Exchequer. Current rates are shown on the hmrc.gov.uk website.

The calculation of contributions for employees has to be made on each pay period (for non-directors of a company). As a result and unlike UK income tax, a weekly paid employee will face a charge in any week where earnings exceed 1/52 of the annual limit. It is therefore possible for a charge to arise on someone who earns below the limit on an annual basis but who has occasional payments above the weekly limit.

A further complication is that an employee has an allowance per employer, unlike income tax where the allowance is split between employers via the person's tax code. So a person with two low paid jobs would pay less, possibly nothing, than someone who earned the same amount from one job.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Set at 13.25% from 6 April to 5 November 2022
  2. ^ Set at to 3.25% from 6 April to 5 November 2022
  3. ^ Until 5 January 2024
  4. ^ Until 5 July 2022

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ The Committee Office, House of Commons. "www.parliament.uk: Select Committee on Social Security Fifth Report, the Contributory Principle: The relationship between tax and National Insurance". Publications.parliament.uk. Retrieved 21 May 2010.
  2. ^ "PAYE and payroll for employers". GOV.UK. Retrieved 11 May 2018.
  3. ^ "National Insurance Contributions (NICs)".
  4. ^ "National Insurance". GOV.UK. Retrieved 11 May 2018.
  5. ^ "Ministry of Labour and Ministry of National Insurance: National Insurance Stamps, correspondence". nationalarchives.gov.uk. Retrieved 30 October 2011.
  6. ^ "card". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  7. ^ Kynaston, David (2007). A World to Build. London: Bloomsbury. p. 24. ISBN 9780747585404.
  8. ^ Department of the Official Report (Hansard), House of Commons, Westminster. "www.parliament.uk: report on debate which refers to the phrase 'paying the stamp'". Publications.parliament.uk. Retrieved 21 May 2010.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  9. ^ "Social Security Administration Act 1992". Opsi.gov.uk. 6 April 1990. Retrieved 21 May 2010.
  10. ^ Seeley, Anthony (10 June 2014). "National Insurance contributions : an introduction" (PDF). House of Commons Library. Retrieved 23 December 2018.
  11. ^ "Government Actuary's Quinquennial Review of the National Insurance Fund as at April 2020". GOV.UK. Retrieved 2 July 2023.
  12. ^ Understanding the basic State Pension http://www.direct.gov.uk/en/Pensionsandretirementplanning/StatePension/Basicstatepension/DG_10014671
  13. ^ "Total Revenue Pie Chart for FY 2020". UK Public Revenue. Retrieved 21 November 2019.
  14. ^ HM Treasury. "2011 Budget Report (para 1.128)" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 1 August 2011. Retrieved 26 March 2011.
  15. ^ "NICS calculator". HM Revenue & Customs. Retrieved 21 November 2019.
  16. ^ "National Insurance rates and categories". gov.uk. UK Government. Retrieved 21 November 2019.
  17. ^ a b Smith, Jake. "Self-employed National Insurance explained". Crunch. Retrieved 21 November 2019.
  18. ^ "National Insurance for Limited Companies Explained". Gorilla Accounting. 8 January 2020. Retrieved 8 January 2020.
  19. ^ "HM Revenue & Customs: Do you need to top up your National Insurance contributions?".
  20. ^ HM Revenue & Customs. "Self-employed National Insurance rates". HM Revenue & Customs. Retrieved 21 November 2019.
  21. ^ "Non-benefit credits: Overview: What are National Insurance credits".
  22. ^ "National Insurance Number". Cabinetoffice.gov.uk. Archived from the original on 24 July 2012. Retrieved 21 May 2010.
  23. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 March 2012. Retrieved 23 July 2009.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  24. ^ UK Tax History
  25. ^ National Insurance contributions
  26. ^ "PM announces 1.25% National Insurance hike to pay for social care in England".
  27. ^ "National Insurance rise to be reversed in November". BBC News. 22 September 2022. Retrieved 22 September 2022.

External links edit

  • Official website  
  • HMRC Up to date national insurance rates tables
  • National Insurance contribution rates from 1975-76, from the Institute for Fiscal Studies

national, insurance, proposed, scheme, australia, australia, fundamental, component, welfare, state, united, kingdom, acts, form, social, security, since, payment, contributions, establishes, entitlement, certain, state, benefits, workers, their, families, int. For the proposed scheme in Australia see National Insurance Australia National Insurance NI is a fundamental component of the welfare state in the United Kingdom It acts as a form of social security since payment of NI contributions establishes entitlement to certain state benefits for workers and their families Introduced by the National Insurance Act 1911 and expanded by the Labour government in 1948 the system has been subjected to numerous amendments in succeeding years Initially it was a contributory form of insurance against illness and unemployment and eventually provided retirement pensions and other benefits 1 Currently workers pay contributions from the age of 16 years until the age they become eligible for the State pension Contributions are due from employed people earning at or above a threshold called the Lower Earnings Limit the value of which is reviewed each year Self employed people contribute partly through a fixed weekly or monthly payment and partly on a percentage of net profits above a threshold which is reviewed periodically Individuals may also make voluntary contributions to fill a gap in their contributions record and thus protect their entitlement to benefits Contributions are collected by HM Revenue and Customs HMRC For employees this is done through the PAYE Pay As You Earn system along with Income Tax repayments of Student Loans and any Apprenticeship Levy which the employer is liable to pay 2 National Insurance contributions form a significant proportion of the UK Government s revenue raising 145 billion in 2019 20 representing 17 5 of all tax revenue 3 The benefit component includes several contributory benefits availability and amount of which is determined by the claimant s contribution record and circumstances Weekly income and some lump sum benefits are provided for participants upon death retirement unemployment maternity and disability In order to obtain the benefits which are related to the contributions a National Insurance number is necessary 4 Contents 1 History 2 Contributions 2 1 Contribution classes 2 1 1 Class 1 2 1 1 1 Table letters 2 1 1 2 Class 1A 2 1 1 3 Class 1B 2 1 1 4 Contribution rates 2 1 2 Class 2 2 1 3 Class 3 2 1 4 Class 4 2 1 5 NI credits 3 Benefits 3 1 Current benefits 3 2 Former benefits 4 National Insurance number 5 National Insurance and PAYE Service 6 Contribution rates employees 7 Notes 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksHistory edit nbsp A 1940 contribution card for an employed woman The current system of National Insurance has its roots in the National Insurance Act 1911 which introduced the concept of benefits based on contributions paid by employed people and their employer William Martin Smith was issued with the First NI number A1 5 The chosen means of recording the contributions required the employer to buy special stamps from a Post Office and affix them to contribution cards The cards formed proof of entitlement to benefits and were given to the employee when the employment ended leading to the loss of a job often being referred to as being given your cards a phrase which endures to this day although the card itself no longer exists 6 Initially there were two schemes running alongside each other one for health and pension insurance benefits administered by approved societies including friendly societies and some trade unions and the other for unemployment benefit which was administered directly by Government The Beveridge Report in 1942 proposed expansion and unification of the welfare state under a scheme of what was called social insurance In March 1943 Winston Churchill in a broadcast entitled After the War committed the government to a system of national compulsory insurance for all classes for all purposes from the cradle to the grave 7 After the Second World War the Attlee government pressed ahead with the introduction of the Welfare State of which an expanded National Insurance scheme was a major component As part of this process responsibility passed in 1948 to the new Ministry of National Insurance At that point a single stamp was introduced which covered all the benefits of the new Welfare State Stamp cards for class 1 employed contributions persisted until 1975 when these contributions finally ceased to be flat rate and became earnings related collected along with Income Tax under the PAYE procedures Making NI contributions is often described by people as paying their stamp 8 As the system developed the link between individual contributions and benefits was weakened The National Insurance Funds are used to pay for certain types of welfare expenditure and National Insurance payments cannot be used directly to fund general government spending However any surplus in the funds is invested in government securities and so is effectively lent to the government at low rates of interest National Insurance contributions are paid into the various National Insurance Funds after deduction of monies specifically allocated to the National Health Services NHS However a small percentage is transferred from the funds to the NHS from certain of the smaller sub classes Thus the four NHS organisations are partially funded from NI contributions but not from the NI Fund 9 Less than half of benefit expenditure 42 1 now goes on contributory benefits compared with over 65 in 1978 79 because of the growth of means tested benefits since the late 1970s 10 An actuarial evaluation of the long term prospects for the National Insurance system is mandated every 5 years or whenever any changes are proposed to benefits or contributions Such evaluations are conducted by the Government Actuary s Department and the resulting reports must be presented to the UK Parliament The most recent review was conducted as at April 2020 with the report being published two years later 11 Contributions editThe contributions component of the system National Insurance Contributions NICs are paid by employees and employers on earnings and by employers on certain benefits in kind provided to employees The self employed contribute partly by a fixed weekly or monthly payment and partly on a percentage of net profits above a certain threshold Individuals may also make voluntary contributions in order to fill a gap in their contributions record and thus protect their entitlement to benefits Contributions are collected by HM Revenue and Customs HMRC through the PAYE system along with Income Tax and repayments of Student Loans and Postgraduate Loans People in certain circumstances such as caring for a child caring for a severely disabled person for more than 20 hours a week or claiming unemployment or sickness benefits gain National Insurance credits which protects their rights to various benefits 12 National Insurance is a significant contributor to UK government revenues with contributions estimated to comprise 18 of total revenue in the 2019 2020 financial year 13 Contribution classes edit nbsp A British 1948 National Insurance stamp once used to collect contributions to the scheme National insurance contributions NICs fall into a number of classes Class 1 2 and 3 NICs paid are credited to an individual s NI account which determines eligibility for certain benefits including the state pension Class 1A 1B and 4 NIC do not count towards benefit entitlements but must still be paid if due Class 1 edit Class 1 contributions are paid by employers and their employees In law the employee contribution is referred to as the primary contribution and the employer contribution as the secondary but they are usually referred to simply as employee and employer contributions The employee contribution is deducted from gross wages by the employer with no action required by the employee The employer then adds in their own contribution and remits the total to HMRC along with income tax and other statutory deductions Contributions for employees are calculated on a periodic basis usually weekly or monthly depending on how the employee is paid with no reference to earnings in previous periods Those for company directors are calculated on an annual basis to ensure that the correct level of NICs are collected regardless of how often the director chooses to be paid There are a number of milestone figures which determine the rate of NICs to be paid These are the Lower Earnings Limit LEL Primary Threshold PT Secondary Threshold ST and Upper Earnings Limit UEL though often the PT and ST are set to the same value The cash value of most of these figures normally changes each year either in line with inflation or by some other amount decided by the Chancellor The PT is normally indexed to inflation using the CPI while other thresholds remain indexed using the RPI 14 On earnings below the LEL no NICs are paid because no benefits accrue on earnings below this limit On earnings above the LEL up to and including the PT employee contributions are not paid but are credited by the government as if they were enabling certain low paid workers to qualify for benefits On earnings above the LEL up to and including the ST employer contributions are not paid On earnings above the PT ST up to and including the UEL NICs are collected at a rate which is determined by a number of factors Whether the employee has reached the age at which State Pension becomes payable Whether the employee is a married woman paying reduced rate contributions This facility was abolished on 11 May 1977 but women who were already paying these contributions at that time were allowed to opt to continue to do so for as long as they remained married and in employment Whether the employee is an ocean going mariner or deep sea fisherman In the case of the employer contribution whether the employee is aged under 21 or is an apprentice aged under 25 On earnings above the UEL yet another set of rates apply this time depending only on whether the employee has reached the age at which State Pension becomes payable or is an ocean going mariner or deep sea fishermanTable letters edit As indicated above the rates at which an individual and their employer pay contributions depend on a number of factors Consequently there are many possible sets of employer employee contribution rates to allow for all combinations of the various factors HMRC allocate a letter of the alphabet referred to as an NI Table Letter to each of these sets of contribution rates Employers are responsible for allocating the correct table letter to each employee depending on their particular circumstances Each tax year HMRC publish look up tables for each table letter to assist with manual calculation of contributions though these days most of the calculations are done by computer systems and the tables are available only as downloads In addition HMRC provide an online National Insurance Calculator 15 Class 1A edit Class 1A contributions were introduced from 6 April 1991 and are paid by employers on the value of company cars and certain other benefits in kind provided to their employees and directors at the standard employer contribution percentage rate for the tax year Class 1A contributions do not provide any benefit entitlement for individuals Class 1B edit Class 1B contributions were introduced on 6 April 1999 and are payable by employers as part of a PAYE Settlement Agreement an arrangement whereby the employer meets the tax liabilities on certain benefits Class 1B contributions are paid at the same rate as Class 1A contributions and do not provide any benefit entitlement for individuals Contribution rates edit Contribution rates are set for each tax year by the government The general rates for the tax year 2023 24 between 6 January and 5 April 2024 are shown below 16 For those who qualify for the mariners rates the employee rates are as shown below and the non zero employer rates are 0 5 lower than those shown below EmployeesWeekly salary Standard Reduced Over retirement ageUp to 123 a week n a n a n a 123 01 to 242 a week 0 0 0 242 01 to 967 a week 10 3 85 0 Over 967 a week 2 2 0 EmployersWeekly salary Standard Reduced Over retirement age Under 21 apprentice under 25Up to 123 a week n a n a n a n a 123 to 175 a week 0 0 0 0 175 01 to 967 a week 13 8 13 8 13 8 0 Over 967 a week 13 8 13 8 13 8 13 8 Class 1A amp 1B 13 8 13 8 13 8 13 8 Class 2 edit Class 2 contributions are fixed weekly amounts paid by the self employed until 5 April 2023 17 They are due regardless of trading profits or losses but those with low earnings can apply for exemption from paying and those on high earnings with liability to either Class 1 or 4 can apply for deferment from paying As of January 2020 self employed National Insurance Contributions NICs will be categorised as Class 2 when profits are between 6 365 and 8 631 99 a year If a self employed worker earns 8 632 or more a year they will be categorised as Class 4 Class 2 contributions are charged at 3 00 per week and are usually paid by direct debit 18 While the amount is calculated to a weekly figure they were typically paid monthly or quarterly until 2015 For future years class 2 is collected as part of the tax self assessment process For the most part unlike Class 1 they do not form part of a qualifying contribution record for contributions based Jobseekers Allowance but do count towards Employment and Support Allowance Class 3 edit Class 3 contributions are voluntary NICs paid by people wishing to fill a gap in their contributions record which has arisen either by not working or by their earnings being too low Class 3 contributions only count towards State Pension and Bereavement Benefit entitlement The main reason for paying Class 3 NICs is to ensure that a person s contribution record is preserved to provide entitlement to these benefits though care needs to be taken not to pay unnecessarily as it is not necessary to have contributions in every year of a working life in order to qualify 19 Class 4 edit Class 4 contributions are paid by self employed people as a portion of their profits 17 The amount due is calculated with income tax at the end of the year based on figures supplied on the SA100 tax return Contributions are based around two thresholds the Lower Profits Limit LPL and the Upper Profits Limit UPL These have the same cash values as the Primary Threshold and Upper Earnings Limit used in Class 1 calculations No class 4 NICs are due on profits up to and including the LPL Above the LPL up to and including the UPL class 4 NICs are paid at a rate which can vary but has been 9 for several years Above the UPL class 4 NICs are paid at a second rate which has been 2 for several years 20 Class 4 contributions do not form part of a qualifying contribution record for any benefits including the State Pension as self employed people qualify for these benefits by paying Class 2 contributions NI credits edit People who are unable to work for some reason may be able to claim NI credits technically credited earnings since 1987 21 These are equivalent to Class 1 NICs though are not paid for They are granted either to maintain a contributions record while not working or to those applying for benefits whose contribution record is only slightly short of the requirements for those benefits In the latter case they are unavailable to fill gaps in past years in contribution records for some benefits Benefits editThe benefit component comprises a number of contributory benefits of availability and amount determined by the claimant s contribution record and circumstances Weekly income benefits and some lump sum benefits to participants upon death retirement unemployment maternity and disability are provided Current benefits edit Benefits for which there is a contribution condition Bereavement benefit Employment and Support Allowance new style Jobseeker s Allowance new style Statutory Sick Pay State PensionFormer benefits edit Historic benefits for which there was a contribution condition Incapacity Benefit Invalidity Benefit State Earnings Related Pension Scheme Unemployment Benefit Widowed Mother s Allowance Widowed Parent s Allowance Widow s PensionNational Insurance number editMain article National Insurance number To administer the National Insurance system a National Insurance number is allocated to every child shortly after their birth when a claim to Child Benefit is made People coming from overseas have to apply for a NI number before they can qualify for benefits though holding a NI number is not a prerequisite for working in the UK An NI number is in the format two letters six digits and one further letter or a space 22 The example used is typically QQ123456C It is usual to pair off the digits such separators are seen on forms used by government departments both internal and external notably the P45 and P60 National Insurance and PAYE Service editNational Insurance contributions for all UK residents and some non residents are recorded using the NPS computer system National Insurance and PAYE Service This came into use in June and July 2009 23 and brought NIC and Income Tax records together on one system for the first time The original National Insurance Recording System NIRS was a more archaic system first used in 1975 without direct user access to its records A civil servant working within the Contributions Office NICO would have to request paper printouts of an individual s account which could take up to two weeks to arrive New information to be added to the account would be sent to specialised data entry operatives on paper to be input into NIRS NIRS 2 introduced in 1996 was a large and complex computer system which had several uses These included individual applications to access or update an individual National Insurance account to view employer s National Insurance schemes and a general work management application There was some controversy regarding the NIRS 2 system from its inception when problems with the new system attracted widespread media coverage Due to these computer problems Deficiency Notices telling individuals of a possible shortfall in their contributions which had been sent out on an annual basis prior to 1996 stopped being issued the Inland Revenue took several years to clear the backlog As a result many customers were unaware whether they had incomplete years of contributions towards their State Pension Contribution rates employees editAs noted above the employee contribution was a flat rate stamp until 1975 After this the rates have been as follows 24 25 Year Lower band Upper band Above upper band1975 1976 N A 5 5 N A1976 1978 N A 5 75 N A1978 1979 N A 6 5 N A1979 1980 N A 6 75 N A1980 1981 N A 7 75 N A1981 1982 N A 8 75 N A1982 1989 N A 9 N A1989 1994 2 9 N A1994 1999 2 10 N A1999 2003 0 10 N A2003 2011 0 11 1 2011 2022 0 12 2 2022 2023 0 12 a 2 b 2023 2024 c 0 12 2 2024 0 10 2 On 7 September 2021 the government announced an increase of NI rates by 1 25 percentage points for the 2022 23 tax year breaking its 2019 manifesto promise From 2023 a new health and social care levy charged at the 1 25 rate would be introduced with NI rates reverting to their previous rates 26 This move was reversed by new chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng effective 6 November 2022 27 In the early 2000s the lower threshold for employee contributions was aligned with the standard personal allowance for Income Tax but has since diverged significantly as illustrated in the following table The upper limit is currently set at the figure at which the higher rate of Income Tax becomes chargeable for a person on the standard personal allowance for Income Tax in all parts of the UK except Scotland which can set its own level for the tax threshold but not for the NI upper limit Year NI Employee Threshold Income Tax Allowance Charge to NI only2007 8 5 205 5 225 202008 9 5 465 6 435 9702009 10 5 725 6 475 7502010 11 5 725 6 475 7502011 12 7 235 7 475 2402012 13 7 599 8 105 5052013 14 7 755 9 440 1 6852014 15 7 956 10 000 2 0362015 16 8 060 10 600 2 5402016 17 8 060 11 000 2 9402017 18 8 164 11 500 3 3362018 19 8 424 11 850 3 4262019 20 8 632 12 500 3 8682020 21 9 500 12 500 3 0002021 22 9 568 12 570 3 0022022 28 9 880 d 12 570 12 570 2 690 0For 2015 16 there was therefore up to 304 80 payable by someone who has not reached the point where they are liable for Income Tax This has risen to 352 80 for 2016 17 to 400 32 for 2017 18 to 411 12 for 2018 19 and to 464 16 for 2019 20 This fell to 360 for 2020 21 The current Government s manifesto in the 2019 General Election promised to restore the parity between the NI and Tax thresholds by the end of their first term in office The limits were harmonised on 6 July 2022 The limits and rates for the following tax year are normally announced at the same time as the Autumn budget made by the Chancellor of the Exchequer Current rates are shown on the hmrc gov uk website The calculation of contributions for employees has to be made on each pay period for non directors of a company As a result and unlike UK income tax a weekly paid employee will face a charge in any week where earnings exceed 1 52 of the annual limit It is therefore possible for a charge to arise on someone who earns below the limit on an annual basis but who has occasional payments above the weekly limit A further complication is that an employee has an allowance per employer unlike income tax where the allowance is split between employers via the person s tax code So a person with two low paid jobs would pay less possibly nothing than someone who earned the same amount from one job Notes edit Set at 13 25 from 6 April to 5 November 2022 Set at to 3 25 from 6 April to 5 November 2022 Until 5 January 2024 Until 5 July 2022See also editH M Stationery Office Collection A collection of British national insurance stamps in the British Library Philatelic Collections National Insurance Fund Beveridge Report Social securityReferences edit The Committee Office House of Commons www parliament uk Select Committee on Social Security Fifth Report the Contributory Principle The relationship between tax and National Insurance Publications parliament uk Retrieved 21 May 2010 PAYE and payroll for employers GOV UK Retrieved 11 May 2018 National Insurance Contributions NICs National Insurance GOV UK Retrieved 11 May 2018 Ministry of Labour and Ministry of National Insurance National Insurance Stamps correspondence nationalarchives gov uk Retrieved 30 October 2011 card Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press Subscription or participating institution membership required Kynaston David 2007 A World to Build London Bloomsbury p 24 ISBN 9780747585404 Department of the Official Report Hansard House of Commons Westminster www parliament uk report on debate which refers to the phrase paying the stamp Publications parliament uk Retrieved 21 May 2010 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Social Security Administration Act 1992 Opsi gov uk 6 April 1990 Retrieved 21 May 2010 Seeley Anthony 10 June 2014 National Insurance contributions an introduction PDF House of Commons Library Retrieved 23 December 2018 Government Actuary s Quinquennial Review of the National Insurance Fund as at April 2020 GOV UK Retrieved 2 July 2023 Understanding the basic State Pension http www direct gov uk en Pensionsandretirementplanning StatePension Basicstatepension DG 10014671 Total Revenue Pie Chart for FY 2020 UK Public Revenue Retrieved 21 November 2019 HM Treasury 2011 Budget Report para 1 128 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 1 August 2011 Retrieved 26 March 2011 NICS calculator HM Revenue amp Customs Retrieved 21 November 2019 National Insurance rates and categories gov uk UK Government Retrieved 21 November 2019 a b Smith Jake Self employed National Insurance explained Crunch Retrieved 21 November 2019 National Insurance for Limited Companies Explained Gorilla Accounting 8 January 2020 Retrieved 8 January 2020 HM Revenue amp Customs Do you need to top up your National Insurance contributions HM Revenue amp Customs Self employed National Insurance rates HM Revenue amp Customs Retrieved 21 November 2019 Non benefit credits Overview What are National Insurance credits National Insurance Number Cabinetoffice gov uk Archived from the original on 24 July 2012 Retrieved 21 May 2010 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 7 March 2012 Retrieved 23 July 2009 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link UK Tax History National Insurance contributions PM announces 1 25 National Insurance hike to pay for social care in England National Insurance rise to be reversed in November BBC News 22 September 2022 Retrieved 22 September 2022 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to National Insurance Official website nbsp HMRC Up to date national insurance rates tables National Insurance contribution rates from 1975 76 from the Institute for Fiscal Studies Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title National Insurance amp oldid 1194013133, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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