capaDATA
  • PERFORMANCE
    • Younger saver, 30 years to retirement – 5-year annualised returns
    • Younger saver, 30 years to retirement – 3-year annualised returns
    • Younger saver, 30 years to retirement – 1-year annualised returns
    • Older saver, 5 years to retirement – 5-year annualised returns
    • Older saver, 5 years to retirement – 3-year annualised returns
    • Older saver, 5 years to retirement – 1-year annualised returns
  • RISK/RETURN
    • Risk/Return – Younger saver, 30 years from retirement, 5-year annualised
    • Risk/Return – Younger saver, 30 years from retirement, 3-year annualised
    • Risk/Return – Younger saver, 30 years from retirement, 1-year annualised
    • Risk/Return – Older saver, 5 years from retirement, 5-year annualised
    • Risk/Return – Older saver, 5 years from retirement, 3-year annualised
    • Risk/Return – Older saver, 5 years from retirement, 1-year annualised
  • PROVIDERS
    • Aegon Master Trust
    • Aon Master Trust
    • Atlas Master Trust
    • Aviva Master Trust
    • The Bluesky Pension Scheme
    • Ensign Retirement Plan
    • Fidelity Master Trust
    • Legal & General Investment Management – WorkSave Pension Mastertrust
    • LifeSight (Willis Towers Watson)
    • Mercer Master Trust
    • National Employment Savings Trust (NEST)
    • Now: Pensions
    • The People’s Pension
    • Salvus Master Trust
    • Scottish Widows Master Trust
    • Smart Pension
    • Standard Life DC Master Trust
    • SuperTrust UK Master Trust
    • TPT Retirement Solutions
    • Welplan Pensions
  • Research
    • ADVISERS
      • Pension provider selection factors
      • Switching
      • Diversification
      • Illiquids
      • ESG
      • Green
      • Digital
      • Consolidation
    • PROVIDERS
      • Master Trusts by number of members
      • Master Trust defaults by assets and number of employers
      • Member charges
      • Employer charges
      • Master trust investment advisers
      • Equity exposure
      • Derisking
      • Asset managers used
  • NEWS
  • MORE
    • About
    • Advertise
    • Contact us
    • Privacy policy
    • Content syndication
    • Terms & Conditions
CAPA
No Result
View All Result

Jill Henderson: Weighing up the lifetime provider model

02 May 2024
Jill Henderson: Weighing up the lifetime provider model
Share on TwitterShare on FacebookShare on LinkedIn

 

The Government wants a lifetime provider model to address multiple pensions pots.

When I’m out and about meeting consultants and advisers, the discussion inevitably moves onto the subject of pot for life – or the lifetime provider model as it’s more often known.

The Chancellor’s Spring Budget revealed the government is still considering a model where employees would, by default, use the same pension scheme as they move from job to job.

The government wants better outcomes for savers and to stop the proliferation of pension pots which too many people lose track of. Estimates suggest there are around 3m lost pensions pots worth £26bn which is hardly surprising given that people have an average of 11 jobs during their lifetime.

Increased job mobility can result in a pension pot for every job, a changed relationship between employers and employee pensions – and additional industry costs. The DWP already has the problem of inefficient and costly small pots under £1,000 in its sights and the solution it has proposed to address this could be a stepping stone towards the lifetime provider model.

Lifetime provider model: call for evidence

While many media headlines at the time of the Spring Budget suggested it’s full steam ahead on the lifetime provider model, the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) is clear that it’s still at the call for evidence stage, and no decision has been made.

As FT Adviser commented, it’s stuck at amber and will get a “definite …green and red light” at some point.

While providers, advisers and employers rightly want to be able to plan so that they’re prepared for any eventuality, whatever happens is still years away.

Employee choice first?

Yet while the DWP is exploring options, it seems to hint employee choice could be introduced first by changing automatic enrolment (AE) rules to require employers to accept an employee’s choice of scheme, with the default lifetime provider model introduced later on.

If it went ahead, it would be a major change to the UK workplace pensions market where employers choose a scheme for their workforce. It’s rare for employers to facilitate payments to an alternative scheme chosen by the employee, who also has to find and consolidate any pots left behind after previous jobs.

As we know, the lifetime provider approach is already used in countries such as Australia, whose pension system is usually held up as a model of excellence.

Australia has experienced significant pension scheme consolidation, with a small number of supersized schemes emerging. Increased consolidation and moving towards fewer, larger schemes is a goal for the UK Government too.

The call for evidence around the lifetime provider model has certainly been polarising in the UK.

It would be a huge undertaking, requiring a lot of the government and industry’s capacity for change, with significant costs, including for employers who would have to be able to direct payments to multiple schemes instead of just one.

This could undermine other priorities, such as increasing savings to get more of the UK population on track for adequate retirement incomes when too many are falling far short.

Greater scale and more stable memberships of pension schemes make it easier for schemes to invest in less liquid assets, such as infrastructure or private equity – a cornerstone of the Government’s 2023 Mansion House compact. Diversification and the search for better returns underpin this.

There is also the worry that, without appropriate protections, more money will be spent by pension schemes on advertising and that this cost would be passed on to savers.

Supersized Australian experience

There are parallels with Australia here, where some schemes appear to have bigger marketing budgets, and their fees tend to be higher than in the UK. The new value for money framework would need to be implemented effectively to mitigate this risk.

Some have also suggested fees might increase if employees no longer have the benefit of collective bargaining via their employer as well as a reduction in cross-subsidies from those with big pots to those with small pots. As it stands now, workplace schemes tend to have a single charge for their employees, whereas retail pensions often use tiered charges, with reduced fees for larger pots.

We await the Government’s views on these different arguments, but if there is to be a change, it will be quite a few years away.

For the concept to work, we would first need a much more consolidated market of fewer, larger pension schemes.

For the latest news, expertise and thought leadership from Scottish Widows’ workplace pensions experts, click here.

The post Jill Henderson: Weighing up the lifetime provider model appeared first on Corporate Adviser.

TweetShareShare
Previous Post

SPP raises underperformance concerns over UK equities investment proposal

Next Post

Simplyhealth partners with EyeMed to offer discounted optical services

Category

  • By Provider
  • News
  • Not for search
  • Provider page archive
  • Uncategorized
  • video
CAPA data

© 2019-2024 Definite Article Media Limited. Design by 71 Media Limited.

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact us
  • Privacy policy
  • Syndication

Follow us

No Result
View All Result
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact us
  • Privacy policy
  • Syndication

This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish.AcceptReject Read More
Privacy & Cookies Policy

Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may affect your browsing experience.
Necessary
Always Enabled
Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. This category only includes cookies that ensures basic functionalities and security features of the website. These cookies do not store any personal information.
Non-necessary
Any cookies that may not be particularly necessary for the website to function and is used specifically to collect user personal data via analytics, ads, other embedded contents are termed as non-necessary cookies. It is mandatory to procure user consent prior to running these cookies on your website.
SAVE & ACCEPT
No Result
View All Result
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact us
  • Privacy policy
  • Syndication