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Weekend reading: We need fewer ISAs

What caught my eye this week.

One of my least favourite articles on Monevator is the stab I had at explaining Lifetime ISAs [1].

In fact it was my second stab. I’d updated an even flimsier first effort just a couple of years later.

But I’d left a 2,500 word version 3.0 unpublished. Mostly because I felt it needed another 2,000 words to be comprehensive. And did anyone want to read that?

My published take is not a terrible article. But it doesn’t do a truly great job at explaining why the Lifetime ISA is a terribly confused addition to the ISA lineup.

And there are now better articles out there explaining exactly who might want to use a Lifetime ISA. Complete with the couple of dozen or more caveats and complications that such an article requires.

Fleas on fleas

My Lifetime ISA excursions triggered a bit of a crisis of confidence at Monevator Towers.

How comprehensive could or should we try to be?

We have perhaps the best reader comments on any financial site in the UK. And I knew that regulars would (constructively and rightly) point out the gaps in my explanation.

I didn’t mind that – indeed I welcomed it – but I also knew I’d be a bit miffed by some of them. That’s because it’s hard to explain how one-size-fits-nobody once you get beyond the basics of personal finance and investing to someone who hasn’t tried giving the complete picture themselves.

You need to write about something – whether ISAs or particle physics – to see that very often, the one thing you believe is of most importance is very often somebody else’s superfluous detail.

The Lifetime ISA experience ultimately nudged us towards doing fewer and deeper articles – especially for my co-blogger – and I feel we lost some of the breezy accessibility of an earlier Monevator in the transition.

But that’s the trouble with knowledge. The more you know about something, the more you’re aware of all the edge cases, contradictions – and everything you don’t know.

It was easier to write Monevator 15 years ago when we had less to share but didn’t really appreciate that. Knowledge is labyrinthine.

For whom the bell tolls

Anyway this isn’t all just me getting the tiny violins out about the hard lot of being a blogger.

It’s more a rambling Bank Holiday prelude to say I have sympathy with Andy Bell’s views on ISAs, which he’s been floating in the media recently.

Bell – the founder of the SIPP platform that carries his name – told the Financial Times [2] this week that his company proposed:

…scrapping separate cash and stocks and shares Isas to create a single new offering.

It also wants to reform the Help to Buy and Lifetime Isas, which offer a tax-free bonus to people aged under 40 saving for a home. The platform is also urging the abolition of the Innovative Finance Isa, a type of peer-to-peer loan.

Bell said plans had been presented to chancellor Jeremy Hunt and reflected an ambition to simplify Isas to motivate savings and investment.

While he acknowledged the plans could narrow consumer choice, he insisted that the range of products currently on offer were too complicated.

“The proliferation of Isa products worries me. If you’ve got six Isa products to choose from, you almost give up,” said Bell. “If you were starting with a blank sheet of paper you wouldn’t design what we’ve got today.”

As somebody who did my time in the trenches on the ins and outs of various ISA products, I agree.

It’s true that a Monevator maven – someone who reads every article and pulls us up on our errors and omissions – no doubt enjoys nothing more than shifting from optimal savings [3] product to tax-efficient vehicle [4] to tax defusing [5] like a freestyle skateboarder doing tricks.

I’m one of those too.

But in the profusion of ISA types, the average person just sees more jargon layered on top of the already murky world of saving and investing. And they have a point.

Ideally we’d have just one kind of savings account. Flat tax relief at 30%. With some curbs or outright restrictions on withdrawing and replacing all the money, to incentivize saving for old age. But those guardrails as clear as possible too.

The complexity we have today in ISAs and pensions1 [6] is more a result of politicians looking for rabbits to whip out of hats – or sneaky opportunities to take back what they gave us before – rather than joined-up thinking.

True, simplified ISAs would do Monevator out of a few opportunities for articles. But after my experience with the myriad (don’t-) use cases for the Lifetime ISA, I’ll live with that.

Have a great long weekend!

From Monevator

How to think about Junior SIPP asset allocation – Monevator [7]

The Warren Buffett hedge fund that wasn’t – Monevator [8]

From the archive-ator: Holiday strategies to refresh a frugal soul – Monevator [9]

News

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Average monthly rent hits £2,500 in London and £1,190 in rest of UK – Guardian [10]

73% surge in current account switching in 2023 – Independent [11]

Just 800 of 4,000 laws to be scrapped in ‘Brexit bonfire’ – Sky News [12]

SIPP operator Gaudi is in administration; no impact on clients – FCA [13]

Thousands missing out on heat pump subsidies worth up to £6,000 – This Is Money [14]

Plans approved for UK’s first women-only tower block – Guardian [15]

‘Brushing’ scam: Amazon sellers sending stuff to random addresses – Which [16]

Only 4% of 2m UK voters without Voter ID apply for ID through scheme – BBC [17]

[18]

The UK faces a steep climb out of a deep hole – Spiegel International [19]

Products and services

40-year mortgages on the rise, but what are the risks? – Which [20]

£100 offer ends 1 May Last chance to claim an additional £100 bonus when you open an account with InvestEngine via our link [21] and transfer an ISA valued at £10,000 or more. All new accounts also get a £25 bonus on investing at least £100 (T&Cs apply. Capital at risk) – InvestEngine [21]

Nearly 5%… Al-Rayan touts 4.9% three-year fixed rate savings – This Is Money [22]

A shed office adds £22,000 to your home’s value – This Is Money [23]

Open a SIPP with Interactive Investor and pay no SIPP fee for six months. Terms apply – Interactive Investor [24]

Should you share TV streaming accounts? – Be Clever With Your Cash [25]

The UK’s best and worst seaside towns – Which [26]

Will Apple take a big bite out of the banks? [Search result]FT [27]

Homes to tempt British buyers this spring, in pictures – Guardian [28]

Comment and opinion

The mortgage dilemma: to fix or not to fix [Search result]FT [29]

Why the pensions Triple Lock has to go – Tom Jones via Twitter [30]

Frugal man buys $52,000 car – Mr Money Mustache [31]

You’re neither as smart – nor as dumb – as you think – Humble Dollar [32]

How much of your salary is punitive damages? – Klement on Investing [33]

You have to own – Dror Poleg [34]

Discombobulated – Indeedably [35]

Beware ETFs with a ‘new edge’ – Citywire RIA [36]

Get ready for Retirement 3.0 – A Teachable Moment [37]

Market cycles mini-special

Understanding the basics of market cycles – Darius Foroux [38]

When market volatility creates opportunity – Janus Henderson [39]

After a bad year in the market – A Wealth of Common Sense [40]

When, where, and for how long? – The Big Picture [41]

Naughty corner: Active antics

Buy Sweden – Verdad [42]

Returns from the oldest investment trusts – IT Investor [43]

Larry Swedroe: expenses matter with active funds – Advisor Perspectives [44]

Is the Bitcoin comeback for real? – Institutional Investor [45]

Downside betas vs downside correlations – Finominal [46]

The sell-side is harder than the buy-side… – Behind the Balance Sheet [47]

…or is the buy-side harder than the sell-side? – Klement on Investing [48]

Kindle book bargains

Influence Empire: Tencent and China’s Tech Ambition by Lulu Yilun Chen – £0.99 on Kindle [49]

The Missing Cryptoqueen by Jamie Bartlett – £0.99 on Kindle [50]

The Nowhere Office: Reinventing Work and the Workplace by Julie Hobsbawm – £0.99 on Kindle [51]

Cooking on a Bootstrap by Jack Monroe – £0.99 on Kindle [52]

Environmental factors

‘Endless record heat’ in Asia – Guardian [53]

Cities are reclaiming land at risk of extreme sea level rise – Hakai [54]

How South East Asia is fighting back to save corals – Guardian [55]

The flawed logic of extreme climate solutions – MIT Tech Review [56]

Why cutting your personal carbon footprint matters – Semafor [57]

Robot overlord roundup

Inside ‘the mind’ of ChatGPT, with Cal Newport – Range Widely [58]

There’s a new AI unicorn that will make coders faster – Semafor [59]

Welcome to the age of AI-assisted dating – Washington Post [60]

Microsoft nearing a $1bn-a-year run-rate AI business – Tom Tunguz [61]

AI is taking work from Kenyans who write essays for US students – RoW [62]

Off our beat

Some things I think – Morgan Housel [63]

How shady companies guess your religion, sexual orientation, and mental health – Slate [64]

Pour one out for the notion of healthy alcoholic drinking – Slate [65]

The underground city found in a man’s basement – Atlas Obscura [66]

Magnus Carlsen: the winner’s edge – Farnam Street [67]

Kevin Kelly on excellent advice for living, universal AI assistants, time machines, and the power of fully becoming yourself [Podcast] – Tim Ferris via Apple [68]

And finally…

“Three things ruin people: drugs, liquor, and leverage.”
– Charlie Munger, Charlie Munger: The Complete Investor [69]

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  1. Especially with the recently abolished Lifetime Allowance [76]. [ [77]]