Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The three British National Insurance Funds hold the contributions of the National Insurance Scheme, set up by the Government of the United Kingdom in 1911. It was reformed in 1948 and assumed broadly its current form in 1975, when the separate National Insurance (Industrial Injuries) and National Insurance (Reserve) Funds were merged with it. [ 1 ]
England and Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland, except that sections 1, 3, 5, 7 and 9 extend only to England and Wales and Scotland, sections 2, 4, 6, 8 and 10 extend only to Northern Ireland, and an amendment, repeal or revocation contained in Schedule 1 or 2 has the same extent as the enactment or instrument to which it relates. [2] Dates
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.
An Act to provide for Insurance against Loss of Health and for the Prevention and Cure of Sickness and for Insurance against Unemployment, and for purposes incidental thereto. Citation: 1 & 2 Geo. 5. c. 55: Territorial extent England and Wales; Scotland; Northern Ireland: Dates; Royal assent: 16 December 1911: Commencement: 1 July 1912
This section extends to each part of the United Kingdom. [8]Section 6(2) provides that paragraph 6(3) of Schedule 1, and Schedule 2 so far as relating to the repeals mentioned in that paragraph, come into force on the day appointed by an order under section 30(2) of the Pensions Act 2007 for the coming into force of paragraph 45(2) of Schedule 4 to that Act.
Parliament of England; Royal statutes, etc. issued before ... (Re-rating and Northern Ireland National Insurance Fund Payments) Order (Northern Ireland) 1995 (S.R ...
It was a historic result, with a nationalist party emerging with the most seats for the first time. Michelle O’Neill, the Sinn Fein leader in Northern Ireland, is in line to take the symbolic ...
It amends the law relating to national insurance contributions. Its precursor was an announcement made in the Paymaster General's Pre-Budget Report 2004. [3] HM Revenue and Customs estimated that the Act would secure £95 million in national insurance contributions for the financial year 2004-05 and £240 million per annum in subsequent years. [4]