Rachel Reeves puts pensions review on hold to avoid extra burden on UK business
Stay informed with free updates
Simply sign up to the Workplace pensions myFT Digest — delivered directly to your inbox.
Chancellor Rachel Reeves has put a review of pensions on hold after fears it could force employers to increase their contributions to staff retirement pots by billions of pounds.
Reeves wants to avoid putting any more pressure on business following an angry backlash over her Budget, which hit employers with a ÂŁ25bn bill for extra national insurance contributions.
Pensions minister Emma Reynolds had promised to launch a review looking at the adequacy of retirement savings before the end of the year, but this has now been delayed indefinitely.
Under current auto-enrolment rules, staff must pay at least 8 per cent of qualifying earnings into their workplace pension each year, at least 3 per cent of which must come from employersâ contributions.Â
Many experts believe such rates would leave many people without adequate retirement incomes.Â
Earlier this year Phoenix Group, the UKâs largest retirement savings business, projected that raising the minimum auto-enrolment level to 12 per cent would result in an additional ÂŁ10bn in annual pension contributions, shared between employees and employers.Â
But the Department for Work and Pensions has told the Financial Times it will not launch the second phase of its pensions review this year, with people briefed on the issue saying Reeves had blocked the move.
âRachel is very aware of the fact that business is facing more tax and she is serious about ensuring that new burdens are not placed on business,â said one person familiar with discussions between the Treasury and DWP.
In the first phase of the pensions review, Reeves announced plans for a series of âmegafundsâ of at least ÂŁ25bn each across defined contribution and local government pension schemes, a move she hopes will free up ÂŁ80bn for investment in start-ups and infrastructure.Â
Although government officials insist the second phase was not being âlong-grassedâ, there is no new date for when it might be launched. âItâs âTBCâ,â said one official.
A DWP spokesperson said: âWe are determined to ensure that tomorrowâs pensioners are supported, which is why the government announced the landmark two-stage pensions review days after coming into office. Government will set out more details on the second phase in due course.â
Sir Steve Webb, former pensions minister and a consultant at LCP, said the delay was âdeeply depressingâ as it could result in âyet more wasted yearsâ.Â
âThe Budget was the death knell for the prospect of any serious progress on pensions adequacy,â said Webb. Â
When the government announced its pensions review in July, it said it would âconsider further steps to improve pension outcomes and increase investment in UK markets, including assessing retirement adequacyâ.
Pension experts are concerned that if the delays drag on, that could compromise the retirement prospects of millions of savers.Â
Research from the Institute for Fiscal Studies this year found that 30 to 40 per cent of savers in defined contribution schemes are on course to have retirement incomes that fall below the minimum retirement living standard set out by the Pensions and Lifetime Savings Association trade body.Â
âItâs causing us a level of concern because from our perspective itâs a very critical jigsaw piece in terms of the overall review,â said Zoe Alexander, director of policy and advocacy at the PLSA.Â
âIt feels to us that thereâs not a moment to lose in terms of having this debate.â
The PLSA has called for the government to gradually increase minimum auto-enrolment contributions to around 12 per cent of an individualâs salary.Â
Phoenix also said that a 15-year delay in implementing this increase could result in a typical 18-year-old losing approximately ÂŁ35,000 in retirement savings.
https://www.ft.com/__origami/service/image/v2/images/raw/https%3A%2F%2Fd1e00ek4ebabms.cloudfront.net%2Fproduction%2F35094b4b-8f25-458a-9eae-597c1c7e1035.jpg?source=next-article&fit=scale-down&quality=highest&width=700&dpr=1
2024-12-14 05:00:22