New advice to help savers see the full benefit of their
pensions when they retire has been published by the government
today.
An industry working group, chaired by the Department for Work and
Pensions, has published recommendations on how to ensure the
growth in small pension pots driven by automatic enrolment does
not disadvantage savers.
Automatic enrolment has extended workplace pension coverage to
the mass market, including young people and low earners - many
for the first time. In 2019/20, it was estimated an extra £18.8
billion per year was being saved into workplace pensions.
But this has also led to a rise in small pots - often formed
during brief stints of employment – which means savers may not
experience the best possible outcomes; small pots could be lost,
or left deferred and slowly eroded due to pension scheme charges.
Without change, it is feared millions of pots could be lost over
the coming decades. DWP modelling in 2012 estimated that
automatic enrolment was expected to create around 50 million
dormant pension pots by 2050.
Minister for Pensions said:
Given the risks that the growth of small pots presents to
savers and their ability to plan for retirement, it is vital
that we find a solution.
Savers deserve to know that their hard-earned pension pots will
be working for them through their career and ready for them
when they retire.
The Working Group’s recommendations include:
-
Industry, government and regulators should continue to
develop options to consolidate small pension pots at the
request of savers.
-
Saver requests will, however, need to be complemented by
automatic large scale transfers and consolidation with an
opt-out solution, to address the growth of small pots.
Solutions involving consolidating pension pots are expected to
start with the pensions industry investigating and addressing
administrative challenges, including how to enable the transfer
of large numbers of small pots easily.
This work will complement plans to introduce pensions dashboards,
which will allow individuals to keep track of their small pension
pots more easily, helping them to better plan for retirement.
- The Working Group report
can be read in full on GOV UK.
- Anyone wanting to locate a lost pension pot should visit the
Pension Tracing
Service page.
- A key aspect of this year’s review of the default fund charge
cap and standardised cost disclosure, was to consider the impact
of flat fees in eroding the value of small pension pots. The
publication of this is expected soon.