All Work and Pensions Committee articles – Page 9
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Opinion
Carillion's post-mortem
It is not unusual for Work and Pensions Committee chair Frank Field to show off an impressive vocabulary when launching a salvo against political and personal foes. But even by his standards, the imagery used to put to bed the failed outsourcer Carillion has taken a turn for the macabre.
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News
Regulator rebuked for 'feeble' response to Carillion underfunding
Carillion’s corporate culture was at the heart of the contractor’s collapse, MPs have concluded, but the Pensions Regulator has also come under fire for “failing in all its objectives” regarding the company’s pension funds.
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News
Smart Pension and L&G to develop first default retirement pathway
Default retirement pathways could become a feature of the UK pensions system as early as next year, as Smart Pension and Legal & General announce plans to develop a product combining drawdown and annuities.
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News
Further details emerge on consolidator safeguards
Investors in The Pension SuperFund will not begin to receive returns on their capital until its consolidated schemes have passed a 115 per cent funding target, its executives have told the Work and Pensions Committee.
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Opinion
Inaction on retirement defaults puts members at risk
From the blog: When discussing retirement pathways, the industry needs to ask itself two key questions: what is the goal of auto-enrolment, and what does success look like?
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Features
Has the industry kept its promise on at-retirement innovation?
Analysis: When the Department for Work and Pensions allowed the industry to block mastertrust Nest from entering the drawdown market in 2017, it did so with a proviso; the industry had to drive innovation itself.
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Opinion
PLSA: Signpost savers towards default pathways
Earlier this month, the Work and Pensions Committee called for a simple package of measures to create better informed, more engaged pensions savers.
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News
Select committee launches inquiry into DB white paper
The Work and Pensions Committee has launched an inquiry into the government's recent white paper on defined benefit security and sustainability, asking how the proposed measures are likely to be most effective and whether legislation should be fast-tracked.
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News
UK could profit from Australia’s missed default opportunity
A default drawdown proposition rejected by the Australian government could offer “freedom from the pension freedoms” for unengaged savers who cannot afford advice at retirement, it has been claimed.
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News
Retirement defaults would strengthen UK system, experts say
UK pension commentators often point to the Netherlands as an example of a country with a good pensions system, but the UK’s introduction of freedom and choice has also attracted interest from Dutch pension experts.
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News
Default drawdown tops select committee's at-retirement wishlist
Providers of drawdown products should be required to develop charge-capped default products to help disengaged savers make their pension last, the Work and Pensions Committee has recommended.
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News
Ofwat queried on water companies' DB closure plans
Chair of the Work and Pensions Committee Frank Field has written to Ofwat, the utilities regulator, about proposals by United Utilities and Anglia Water to close their defined benefit schemes to future accrual while continuing to pay out large amounts to shareholders.
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News
PwC probed on Carillion fees and conflicts
MPs have grilled PwC partners on fees and the safeguards the accountancy firm put in place to prevent conflicts of interest arising from its various roles regarding collapsed contractor Carillion.
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News
Fines for DB negligence leave industry split
Employers who wilfully or recklessly put their defined benefit pension schemes at risk are in the firing line of new punitive fines announced in a government policy statement released on Monday.
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News
Reuters steps up member comms during sponsor M&A
Trustees of the defined benefit schemes of Thomson Reuters have been updating members about the agreed sale of part of the business, as experts stress the fine line between saying too much or too little about a deal.
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News
Govt 'tempted' by latest Royal Mail CDC proposals
The Department for Work and Pensions is “tempted” to lay regulations facilitating the creation of collective defined contribution schemes, following a recent breakthrough by the team drafting proposals on behalf of Royal Mail.
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News
Field urges FCA to cast net wider on transfer advice
The Work and Pensions Committee has urged regulators “to get their houses in order now” to protect pension scheme members from another mis-selling scandal.
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News
Cold-call ban needs hefty fines to work, experts say
The government's decision to speed up its ban on cold calls and emails related to pensions must be supported by credible regulations and deterrent fines if consumers are to be protected, industry commentators have said.
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News
Government commits to 2018 cold-calling ban
The Department for Work and Pensions has committed to banning pensions cold calls by June this year, bowing to pressure from MPs and peers to bring forward its timetable for taking action.
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Opinion
The pensions industry risks betraying Generation X
The intergenerational contract, the long-held view that any generation will and should be better off than the one that preceded it, is broken.