The government has announced that Class 2 National Insurance contributions (NIC) will not be abolished in the current
parliament. It had been due to be abolished in April 2019.
Class 2 NIC is payable on self-employed profits, currently at the rate of £2.95 per week. There is no liability if profits are below the small profits threshold, currently £6,205 per year. However, in that situation the
individual can pay Class 2 NIC voluntarily, in order to maintain their NIC record and entitlement to the state pension and other contributory benefits.
The main reason given is concern about the impact the change would have on self-employed people with low
profits. Once Class 2 was abolished, such people could still pay NICs voluntarily in order to maintain their NIC record, but this would have to be at the higher Class 3 rate (currently £14.65 per week).
The statement notes that although the
abolition of Class 2 NICs was intended to simplify the tax system for the self-employed, the options to avoid the impact on low earners “introduce greater complexity to the tax system, undermining the original objective of the policy”.
The
government has been looking at reform of NIC for the self-employed for some time. The proposed abolition had already been postponed from the original planned date of April 2018. The intention was that the abolition of Class 2 would be accompanied by an increase in Class 4 NIC, which is payable on profits over £8,424 per year.
Noel Guilford