Pensions in the United Kingdom

Chair comments on appointment of new CEO to The Pension Regulator

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, December 19, 2018

The Work and Pensions Committee Chair comments on new appointment of new TPR CEO

Key Points: 
  • Commenting on todays announcement of the appointment of a new Chief Executive to The Pension Regulator, to succeed Lesley Titcomb, Rt Hon Frank Field MP said:
    We wish Charles Counsell well in his new role.
  • But this appointment is unlikely to leave unscrupulous company directors quaking in their boots.
  • As someone who was part of TPRs board while it failed to prevent the directors of BHS and Carillion running their pension schemes into the ground, he will have a long way to go to demonstrate that he really is the new broom thats so desperately needed.
  • Alongside this, the Committee is today publishing a series of correspondence on the process for appointing the new chief executive.

Chair comments on appointment of new CEO to The Pension Regulator

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, December 19, 2018

The Work and Pensions Committee Chair comments on new appointment of new TPR CEO

Key Points: 
  • Commenting on todays announcement of the appointment of a new Chief Executive to The Pension Regulator, to succeed Lesley Titcomb, Rt Hon Frank Field MP said:
    We wish Charles Counsell well in his new role.
  • But this appointment is unlikely to leave unscrupulous company directors quaking in their boots.
  • As someone who was part of TPRs board while it failed to prevent the directors of BHS and Carillion running their pension schemes into the ground, he will have a long way to go to demonstrate that he really is the new broom thats so desperately needed.
  • Alongside this, the Committee is today publishing a series of correspondence on the process for appointing the new chief executive.

Chair comments on appointment of new CEO to The Pension Regulator

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, December 19, 2018

The Work and Pensions Committee Chair comments on new appointment of new TPR CEO

Key Points: 
  • Commenting on todays announcement of the appointment of a new Chief Executive to The Pension Regulator, to succeed Lesley Titcomb, Rt Hon Frank Field MP said:
    We wish Charles Counsell well in his new role.
  • But this appointment is unlikely to leave unscrupulous company directors quaking in their boots.
  • As someone who was part of TPRs board while it failed to prevent the directors of BHS and Carillion running their pension schemes into the ground, he will have a long way to go to demonstrate that he really is the new broom thats so desperately needed.
  • Alongside this, the Committee is today publishing a series of correspondence on the process for appointing the new chief executive.

Committee looks into the hidden costs of pensions

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, December 5, 2018

Committee questions pension schemes representatives, asset managers and advisers

Key Points: 
  • The Work and Pensions Select Committee questions representatives of pension schemes, asset managers and advisers, as well as the co-author of a trade union report on pension cost transparency.
  • The Committee will be looking into what has been done recently to increase transparency of pension costs and charges, and whether these measures go far enough.
  • The Committee has previously heard concerns that asset managers provide opaque information, leading to widespread lack of understanding of fees and poor outcomes for pension scheme members.
  • The Committee is conducting an inquiry into Pensions Costs and Transparency to examine whether the pensions industry provides sufficient transparency around charges, investment strategy and performance.

GMP equalisation

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, December 4, 2018

Tuesday, December 4, 2018Looks at the debate around the equalisation of GMPs and the recent High Court judgment in relation to the Lloyds Bank pension scheme

Key Points: 
  • House of Commons Library

    Looks at the debate around the equalisation of GMPs and the recent High Court judgment in relation to the Lloyds Bank pension scheme

    When the State Earnings Related Pension Scheme (SERPS)was introduced in April 1978, it was possible to contract-out of it into an occupational pension scheme.

  • A condition of it being used to contract-out was that the scheme provided a defined benefit (known as a GMP).
  • The requirement to provide a GMP was removed from April 1997 but schemes still have to provide them for rights built up before that date.
  • In 2016, it launched a further consultation on an alternative methodology, which was generally considered to be a distinct improvement.

Brexit - implications for private pensions

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, December 4, 2018

Tuesday, December 4, 2018Looks at the emerging discussion about the potential implications of Brexit for EU pensions

Key Points: 


House of Commons Library

Brexit - implications for private pensions


    Looks at the emerging discussion about the potential implications of Brexit for EU pensions

What is the legal framework?

  • The design of pension systems is largely the responsibility of Member States. The regulatory framework at EU level covers:
    • establishing an internal market for funded occupational pension schemes and the minimum standards to protect scheme members;
    • minimum guarantees concerning accrued rights in occupational pension schemes in case of the insolvency of the sponsoring employer; and
    • anti-discrimination rules. (European Commission Memo 10/302 Green Paper on Pensions and Green Paper. Towards adequate sustainable and safe European pension systems, July 2010, SEC(2010)830)
  • The Pension and Lifetime Savings Association (PLSA) explains that UK workplace pension schemes tend to operate on a national basis but want access to investment opportunities and service providers in the EU:
    1. Workplace pension schemes in the UK are not generally looking to provide pensions to workers in other Member States. So, in this respect, there is little interest in taking up the opportunities that might - in theory at least – be provided by an effective EU-wide Single Market.
    2. However, workplace pension schemes do want ready access to investment opportunities and service providers in EU and across the world, and this is where a strong Single Market has a role to play. Having ready access to the widest possible range of service providers helps schemes to invest their assets and administer their schemes with a minimum of cost in order to provide the best value to their members. (PLSA Response to balance of competences review, January 2013).
  • EU legislation has an impact on them:
    • directly, through pensions-specific EU legislation such as the Directive on Institutions for Occupational Retirement Provision (‘IORP Directive’) that have been transposed into UK law; through the regulatory activities of EIOPA; and through EU employment law, such as the Equal Treatment Directive; and
    • indirectly, because the costs of complying with the EU’s investment markets legislation (such as EMIR, MIFID, the draft Money Market Funds Regulation and the potential Financial Transaction Tax) are passed to pension fund clients by asset managers, brokers and banks. (Ibid)

What will Brexit mean for this?

  • The PLSA said pension schemes need a strong economy, the right regulation and strong financial services.
  • They did not want major regulatory upheaval: UK pensions law is extensively intertwined with EU law, regulations and court rulings.
  • However, it would be important to protect them from any EU legislation on a solvency-based funding regime for pension schemes that might be introduced in the longer term (Ibid).
  • The ABI has set out 'five key asks' for UK insurers: securing an appropriate regulatory environment; retaining the ability to passport out of and into the UK; closely mirroring the EU data protection regime; an improved future migration policy that enables the employment of high-skilled professionals from both within and outside the EU; a strong focus on regulatory dialogue and interantional agreements on financial services markets (ABI press release, 12 December 2016).

What about market changes?

  • (Market volatility following the EU referendum: guidance statement from TPR, July 2016).
  • The PLSA has produced a Brexit to-do-list for trustees, setting out ten actions to ensure their scheme is well-placed to deal with Brexit, including reviewing the employer covenant funding status and investment strategy.

What does the pensions industry want?

  • According to the PLSA, the UK has the larges pensions sector in Europe, providing pensions for 20 million people and with over £1 trillion of assets under management. It argues that a successful outcome from the Brexit negotiations would include the following:
    • For a strong economy: replication of both the current UK-EU framework for free trade in goods and existing EU free trade agreements with third countries. Also, a new immigration policy that continues to allow flows of talent and labour from the EU for the good of the wider economy in general and pension schemes in particular;
    • For the right regulation: the maximum possible access to the Single Market in services – while also exempting pension schemes that operate only in the UK from damaging EU pensions regulation, such as a potential solvency-based regime for pension funds;
    • For strong financial services: continuation of the passporting regime so that pension funds can invest efficiently. (PLSA, Brexit and Pension Schemes: Getting the right deal for Britain’s savers, January 2017).
  • The ABI has called on the Government to “make a clear commitment that it will seek an early agreement with our European partners on a high level transitional implementation period which will help avoid economic shocks to both the UK and the EU”. It has also set out ‘five key asks’ for UK insurers:
    • Securing a regulatory environment that is appropriate for the UK market.
    • Retaining the ability to passport out of and into the UK.
    • Closely mirroring the EU data protection regime to avoid a quagmire of complexity around how personal and non-personal data is protected.
    • An improved future migration policy that enables the employment of high-skilled professionals from both within and outside the EU. (ABI calls for ‘clear commitment’ to a transitional implementation period following Brexit, December 2016).

Some potential areas of impact...

  • When the UK leaves the EU, those relying on a passport, which at that point falls away, may be in breach of local law.
  • There are a range of possible solutions to those ranging from leaving firms to sort it out themselves, to mutually agreed and enacted solutions.

Committee demands answers on carer overpayments

Retrieved on: 
Friday, November 30, 2018

Work Pensions Committee calls on the Minister to reflect on carers’ testimonies

Key Points: 
  • The Government has previously rejected calls from the Work and Pensions Committee for a taper to be introduced to remove this cliff edge.
  • It has recently been reported that the DWP is pursuing thousands of recipients of Carers Allowance for overpayments of the benefit.
  • Writing to the Minister for Disabled People, Health and Work, Sarah Newton MP, the Chair is demanding answers about overpayments, prosecutions and exactly how the Department has let this happen.
  • The Committee has made constructive and sensible recommendations to make the system simpler, which the Government has rejected out of hand.

Brexit and state pensions

Retrieved on: 
Friday, November 30, 2018

Thursday, November 29, 2018This Commons Library briefing looks at EU law providing for the co-ordination of State Pension entitlement and the possible impact of Brexit

Key Points: 
  • House of Commons Library

    Entitlement to the UK State Pension is based on an UK individuals National Insurance record.

  • Each Member State in which the person was insured then calculates its pro-rata contribution and puts that amount into payment.
  • This will ensure that citizens who have moved between the UK and EU before the end of the implementation period are not disadvantaged in terms of access to State Pensions (and other forms of social security).
  • The potential impact on private pensions is discussed in CBP-07629Brexit implications for private pensions.

Chicago Teachers' Pension Fund Maintains Policy To Divest From All Investments In Retail Assault Weapons Manufacturers

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, April 19, 2018

CTPF Trustees continue to hold fund managers accountable for following this policy to protect teachers and students from mass violence.

Key Points: 
  • CTPF Trustees continue to hold fund managers accountable for following this policy to protect teachers and students from mass violence.
  • A pension fund weighs and balances investment risk, and the bottom line is that investing in weapons manufacturers involves intolerable reputational, regulatory, and statutory risks."
  • Established by the Illinois state legislature in 1895, the Chicago Teachers' Pension Fund manages members' assets and administers benefits.
  • The $10.8 billion pension fund serves nearly 86,000 members, and provides pension and health insurance benefits to more than 28,000 beneficiaries.