Another Pensions Bill
by Ian Neale 11/12/2007      Back to previous page

The anticipated new Pensions Bill was published on 5 December and received its First Reading in the Commons. Explanatory Notes are also now available together with pdf versions.

A Government press release summarised the Bill's proposals:

The Bill has five Parts:

By making employers contribute to employees' pensions for the first time, the Government is Bill is finally recognising the achilles heel of stakeholder pensions. It replaces the requirement for employers to designate a stakeholder pension scheme, which was never enforced, by the requirement to auto-enrol employees into personal accounts or a qualifying pension scheme. Enforcement will still be problematic, although the Pensions Regulator (TPR) is given stronger powers than Opra had. TPR will be able to fine employers who fail to comply up to £50,000 initially, increasing by up to £10,000 a day.

At the same time as the Bill appeared, the Government responded to the autumn consultation on its proposals (see previous article) for easing the burden of regulation.

The main outcome of this deregulatory review (ironically contrary to the recommendation of the reviewers themselves) is the controversial option for defined benefit schemes to limit revaluation of deferred pensions to 2.5% (instead of 5%) for rights accrued after the date the Bill's provisions are commenced. The Government says this will save employers around £250m a year on average in the longer term, but how many schemes will decide the additional administrative burden of revaluing in two tranches is worthwhile remains to be seen.

Other decisions the Government has made include