Nobody is forced to invest in stocks and shares but cash isn’t a good investment, in fact, cash isn’t an investment at all but savings.
In April 2008 you could get a decent return on cash savings. The BoE rate in October 2008 was 4.5% - the same as is it now. But the crash of 2008 meant that interest rates plummetted and stayed historically low for 14 years. A year later, the bank rate is was down to 1%. By March 2020 it was 0.1%.
So not only were cash savers getting next to no income from their savings but the value of that cash continued to be eroded by inflation as the value of cash always is.
An example. In 2010, I decided to use some of my savings which were now earning next to nothing and buy another car. I bought a two-year-old Honda Jazz with only 8,000 miles on the clock from a main dealer. The price was £10,000. I still drive that 58 Reg car. It passes its MOT each year but with an increasing number of flags for things that can’t be fixed cheaply which really isn’t worth it compared to the car’s value. I need to think about changing it.
The question is, would that £10,000 buy me the same car now - or the nearest there is in terms of age, spec and mileage? The simple answer is no. Realistically I’d be looking at having to pay around £14,000.
You could play that exercise with all kinds of consumer goods. What would £10,000 have bought you ten or fifteen years ago and what would it cost to buy that same thing now? That’s how cash erodes in value due to inflation and that’s what Emma Reynolds was driving at in the debate in the House of Lords which has lead to this speculation.
In its Spring Budget 2024, the previous government announced the introduction of the UK ISA. That was going to be a £5,000 allowance, in addition to the existing ISA allowance, to provide “a tax-free savings opportunity for people to invest in the UK, while supporting UK companies”.
Investment managers didn’t like it and welcomed Labour’s decision not to implement it.
www.cityam.com/spring-budget-2024-british-isa-doomed-to-fail-as-new-policy-gets-mixed-reaction/
Also read City AM’s report from 30 October 2024.
www.cityam.com/autumn-budget-2024-british-isa-scrapped/
Reeves had previously called for the ISA allowance to be frozen at £15,000 in 2016, stating that the constant increases in the ISA limit had “only helped those who can save big sums of money every year”.
Reeves also has previously called for a lifetime limit on ISA savings of £500,000 *, though this has received significant pushback, with Baroness Altmann, a crossbench peer and former pensions minister, describing the proposed policy as “terrible” in the run-up to the Budget.
“The real issue lies not in a lack of ISA options, but in the fact that too much capital is currently tied up in low-yielding cash ISAs, which fail to benefit either consumers or the broader economy,” explained Rachael Griffin, tax and financial planning expert at Quilter.
“Encouraging more individuals to invest their savings for the long term—rather than sitting in cash—would bring far greater advantages to the UK as a whole.
I checked back. The source was a piece Reeves wrote for the The Independent in January 2016 when the annual ISA limit was £15,000.
Let’s introduce a lifetime allowance of £500,000 for ISA investments and freeze the annual limit at £15,000 for the remainder of this Parliament.
www.independent.co.uk/voices/britain-remains-addicted-to-debt-and-terrible-at-saving-and-this-has-to-change-a6794121.html