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Crikey - the above has left me utterly bewildered. And that I think is part of the problem with pensions and tax.
All I know is I have a non-contributory pension from my employer plus I choose to contribute to two other pensions (these were company arranged personal pensions that I chose to continue paying into when I left previous employment). On more than one occasion I've asked IFAs whether it's worth consolidating and have received advice which is, at best, vague. If the performance of my pensions were a football team, they'd be in League 1.
Even though a PAYE employee I have for many years been self-assessment - strangely I always seem to owe money to the exchequer. Funny that.
I'm not a conspiracy theorist, but if I were I would suggest the pension industry and the tax system in the UK is deliberately confusing to ensure plebs like me have no chance of understanding it! And I really don't. I wouldn't describe myself as stupid, but I genuinely do struggle with these subjects.
Still, good to know that people that have never paid a bean into the system will receive a larger state pension than somebody who has paid all of their dues (if there was a sarcastic emoji I'd use it - if I knew how to use emojis).