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The opdu
Report - Issue 14, May 2003
Bulletin Board
Annual Meeting - Keynote Address:
A Secure Future in Pensions
Julian Brazier TD MP Shadow Minister for Work & Pensions
The following is the text of the speech
given at The Annual Meeting:
You may download
the text of this speech here (45Kb Microsoft
Word file)
The Occupational Pensions sector has been a cornerstone of the
self-sufficiency savings culture of this country for centuries.
Occupational Pensions don't just provide millions of people with
an income in their old age
it provides them with independence,
dignity and above all security.
For that reason I am very grateful to have this opportunity to
address the Annual Meeting of The Occupational Pensions Defence
Union. It is your advice and the invaluable support network you
provide to trustees and others handling the day-to-day running of
pension funds that helps provide the stability that is so vital
for both managers and investors.
Regrettably
it is that vital stability which
has been so seriously threatened
I believe there is a cancer in this country, It's growing spreading
to those who previously thought themselves immune and like all cancers
unless it is dealt with promptly and, if need be, aggressively it
will prove fatal.
And what is this cancer? Retirement Dependency, and unless action
is taken it won't just affect those hitherto reliant upon the State.
The symptoms are all too clearly visible and not just to the pensions
and savings professional. The latest opinion survey by YouGov shows
that 59% of the UK public think there is a pensions crisis and many
more think urgent changes are needed.
Only 1% think policy should stay as it is - and they probably work
for the Treasury - well I'm afraid Chancellor no change is not an
option.
We were once a nation secure in the certainty of having provided
sufficiently for our retirement - many of us are now in danger of
struggling to survive on derisory pension entitlements.
The British household savings ratio has collapsed. At 3.7% it is
at its lowest rate since records began - barely a third of its level
when we left office in 1997. When Labour took Office over two-thirds
of those nearing retirement had a private or occupational pension
scheme, and we had more pension assets saved than all the other
EU countries put together. Today those at the point of retirement
with second pensions have slipped to below three-fifths - and alarmingly
that proportion is still falling.
Final salary pension schemes are closing at a frightening rate.
A survey by the Association of Consulting Actuaries showed that
over 50% are now closed to new members. The next danger is that
schemes will close to existing members as well - it has already
happened in a few cases.
Those workers without a final salary pension scheme can expect
a retirement income typically one-third lower. The minimum
income guarantee will mean many of those who have been prudent enough
to save are no better off than those wholly reliant on the State.
That message may seem to be getting home. 12 million workers, that's
44% of the workforce, now have no personal or occupational pensions
provision at all.
In 1997, the proportion of pensioners reliant on means-tested benefits
was 38% and falling. The House of Commons Library estimates that
by next year it will be 57%. If all things remain equal this can
only increase as more and more of the workforce heads for retirement
with little or no idea of how much they will have to live on -other
than some vague belief that State Benefits topped up by meagre savings
will do.
So, how did we get to this crisis situation?
Well, the causes are not entirely of the government's own making.
They cannot be blamed for the unhappy fallout from an over-valued
stock market nor do they have direct control over the happy increase
in life expectancy, although worryingly the ACA forecasts, if right,
means this is more serious than we think -However I am confident
that by the time of the next election Alistair Cambell will have
found some way to take the credit for the latter and blame the Tories
for the former. What they do have control of are the incentives
to save.
As we all know, in 1997 the new Labour Government cashed in on
the healthy economy they had inherited and used it to justify introducing
a dividend tax on pension's income. Since 1997 this has raised £25
billion (£5 billion a year). David Willetts has calculated
that working from an estimate of the total value of company pension
funds at the end of 1999 of about £725bn and an 11 percent
fall since then to April... funds have fallen by about £80bn.
This calculation puts the losses incurred by pension funds as a
result of the tax dividend income into sharp relief.
Iain Duncan Smith challenged the Prime Minister over this and was
told: "Yes, the stock market has fallen, but it is still massively
up on where it was five years ago".
The truth -as I am sure you all know- is that the stock market
is below the level it was when the Pensions Tax was introduced in
1997.
The Association of Chartered Certified Accountants could not have
put it more clearly when they stated in a recent submission to the
Select Committee on Work and Pensions 'The withdrawal of the tax
credit is, in our view, the most important single contributory factor
in the problems which currently afflict both money purchase and
defined contribution pensions'.
If we combine this with the reduction in the value of contracted
out rebates then we have policies, which appear designed to cause
maximum harm to a private provision culture. Over the last few years
the rebate has become less and less generous... it is now estimated
that their overall level is about £1.5 billion less than it
should be. This is a ludicrous situation. The rebate has to reflect
the full value of the pension it is supposed to pay for or companies
and individuals will simply contract back in to the Second State
Pension.
Taken together the result of these two stealth taxes is the Government
taking an average of an extra £530 each year from every individual
contributing member of a pension scheme.
Pension providers have been hammered by a tide of increased regulation
and bureaucracy. The National Association of Pension Funds has calculated
that there are currently 1,300 pages of tax regulations and Inland
Revenue Practice Notes relating to pensions.
Tax disincentives that penalise savers, extra layers of bureaucracy
and aggressive regulation have strangled the life, dynamism and
innovation out of the pensions and savings market.
However, we have had one success, David Willetts managed, after
a great deal of effort, to persuade the Government to rethink controversial
accounting standard FRS17. But we are by no means complacent
one
suc-cessful engagement has not won us the war.
Unfortunately the twin evils of aggressive regulation and excessive
bureaucracy do not confine themselves to the private pensions sector.
The state sector fares little better. Last Wednesday David Willetts
called on the Government to do more to help poor pensioners receive
the benefits to which they are entitled.
The latest report from the National Audit Office released on the
20th November and entitled Tackling Pensioner Poverty: Encouraging
take-up of Entitlementsy. was truly damning. The benefits system
is now so complicated that take-up of benefits is at catastrophically
low levels. This is a crisis of the Government's own making. They
keep on fiddling with the system and have ended up putting off the
very people they want to help.
As the NAO make clear, poorer pensioners could be losing as much
as £1.9 billion a year in benefits for which they are eligible
(p.16). The main cause is the complexity of the benefits system
and the intrusiveness and unpopularity of means-tests, for example:
- "it takes one and a half hours to fill in an Attendance
Allowance form (p.35);
- "the new, shorter, Minimum Income Guarantee form has 5
supplementary forms (pp.35-36);
- "and Housing Benefit claimants are often asked to provide
the same information twice (p.36).
Labour's decision to rename Income Support for pensioners the Minimum
Income Guarantee has caused great confusion - only 24 per cent of
poorer pensioners recognise the name of the benefit (p.37).
The Government says that the introduction of the Minimum Income
Guarantee and the Pension Credit are designed to protect the more
vulnerable in society. So let us take one of the Government's own
examples from page 19 in their consultation paper. Ivy is a 66 years
old and single, with a Basic Pension of £77 a week and a Serps
pension of £40 totalling £117. The new guaranteed minimum
income level will be £100 a week so Ivy will lose out on this
free top-up of £23. To balance the situation and reward those
who save there will be the pensions credit. As a reward for saving
through a Serps scheme Ivy will receive 60 pence for every pound
of her Serps pension - totalling an extra £24 a week. However
the farce is that she will not get £24 more than the £117
but £24 more than the £100 minimum giving her a total
income of £124. Her pension credit payout is therefore a mere
£7 - whereas those who failed to save privately receive an
extra £23.
It has been projected that those receiving the minimum income guarantee
could rise to 2/3 of the retired population and who can blame them
when you consider Ivy's scenario?
Yet the ineffectiveness of means-testing is shown to be more acute
when one considers that last year 7.4% of Income Support payments
were overpayments or based on fraudulent claims.
There is already clear evidence that the Government's increased
introduction of means testing and annuity regulations are acting
as a deterrent to saving. Their attempt to increase personal pension
provision among low to moderate earners has fallen flat as the 12
million workers without pension schemes show. Indeed pension participation
is falling. Not only are Labour's policies failing, their inability
to see the reality is astounding. David Willett's discovery in February
of a £100 billion error in Labour's figures - unveiling a
trend of inaccuracy that went back 2 yrs - revealed the extent of
their incompetence and confusion.
In just 5 yrs the Government have systematically destroyed the
culture of saving by creating a situation where those prudent enough
to save are little better off than those wholly dependent on the
State. They have created an environment in which welfare dependency
is accepted and encouraged. Eventually it will all become unaffordable
and then it will be, as ever, the most vulnerable in our society
that will suffer most.
So, we've done the easy part; we've spotted the symptoms and diagnosed
the disease; what's the Cure?
There is an urgent need to reverse the negative impact of these
ill thought out Labour policies. We have to get away from means-testing
which encourages people to believe that their retirement is a long
way off and state provision will be sufficient. That is why we propose
in debating Pension Credits that the funds should be focused instead
on the base rate with a top up available to the over-75s.
That is also why David Willetts has announced the imaginative concept
of a life-time saving account into which people could put money
in the good times and which attracts a Government contribution in
an escrow account. They can withdraw the money on a rainy day, but
will only get the benefit of the Government's contribution if they
put the money back before they reach pension age.
The farce of annuity regulations, which penalise the responsible,
need urgent reform to allow for increased flexibility. We have publicly
committed ourselves to reform the laws that force pensioners to
purchase an annuity. As long as pensioners take out an annuity sufficient
to keep them above means-tested benefits, they should be able to
make their own choices as to whether or not to take the remainder
of their pension as a lump sum, which they can leave to their children
and grandchildren.
Above all we must take the politics out of pensions and investments
policy. It is the only way to prevent the short-term smash and grab
policies that have got us into this predicament.
Of course that's easily said
but we have put our money where
our mouth is. Before the last election the industry asked for pledges
that we would not abolish stakeholder pensions and David Willetts
happily gave that assurance. With regard means-testing, whilst we
opposed the Chancellor extending it, the Works & Pensions team
went out of their way to put forward a reasonable alternative with
Steve Webb of the Liberal Democrats and Labour's Frank Field. In
addition to this we co-operated with Alan Pickering's review into
pension regulation.
Therefore, I am happy to announce that the Work & Pensions
Team will be setting up a Pensions and Investments Advisory Group.
This group will be open to anybody wishing to take part that has
an interest in the future of long-term saving in this country. We
will have regular meetings and those wishing to participate can
turn up as they wish and bring to our notice those issues, which
concern them or think we ought to be aware of.
We don't pretend, at present, to have all the answers but with your
help that can change.
By doing this we are striving to ensure any cure doesn't produce
side effects as disastrous as the disease. It is for that reason
that David and rest of the Shadow Works & Pension Team are,
at every opportunity, trying to forge links within the industry,
pensioners groups, policy units and think tanks.
What the industry needs is a radical rethink, with increased flexibility
built in to a less regulated industry. Government intervention has
gone too far and the damage done catastrophic.
Unless action is taken and taken soon... for the majority of Britons
when retirement comes... hopes of it being dignified, secure and
independent of the state will be DOA...
Dead on Arrival.
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