Draft Pensions Dashboards Regulations 2022 The Parliamentary
Under-Secretary of State for Work and Pensions (Laura Trott) I beg
to move, That the Committee has considered the draft Pensions
Dashboards Regulations 2022. It is a pleasure to serve under your
chairmanship, Mrs Murray. The regulations were laid before the
House on 17 October. I am pleased to introduce this instrument
that, subject to approval, will create the framework in which
pensions dashboards...Request free
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Draft Pensions
Dashboards Regulations 2022
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Work and Pensions
()
I beg to move,
That the Committee has considered the draft Pensions Dashboards
Regulations 2022.
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mrs Murray.
The regulations were laid before the House on 17 October. I am
pleased to introduce this instrument that, subject to approval,
will create the framework in which pensions dashboards will
operate.
Pensions dashboards are digital tools that present individuals
with their pensions information. The Pension Schemes Act 2021
gave the Government the powers to create these regulations. The
regulations place requirements on registerable Great
Britain-based occupational pension schemes with over 100 active,
deferred or pension credit members, and specify when those
schemes must connect to the Money and Pensions
Service or MaPS. The Department for Communities is expected
to make corresponding regulations for Northern Ireland. Once
connected, pension schemes must follow the requirement to find
pensions and send the relevant information to an individual’s
chosen qualifying pensions dashboard service.
The regulations provide that the Pensions Regulator may take
enforcement action in relation to pension schemes that do not
comply. The regulations also cover the requirements to be
satisfied in order for a pensions dashboard service to be a
qualifying pensions dashboard service, which include connection
and functionality, display of view data, reporting and monitoring
of the dashboard and enabling an independent person to audit the
provider’s dashboard. Further to this, the Financial Conduct
Authority has published final corresponding rules in relation to
the providers of personal and stakeholder pension schemes, and
will be consulting on a regulatory framework for qualifying
pensions dashboard services later this year.
(Lichfield) (Con)
The dashboards are to be used by consumers to see how their
pensions will evolve over time. Will they be easily accessible?
People, particularly those approaching pensionable age—although
some are computer-literate, some are not—find so many of these
computer programs rather difficult. How accessible will they
be?
I thank my hon. Friend for his intervention. The standards will
be consulted on by MaPS and the FCA, but it is absolutely
intended that they will be as user friendly as possible. A lot of
testing will take place to ensure that that is the case.
The regulations, in combination with a planned order to amend the
Pensions Act 2004, will enable MaPS and the Pensions Regulator to
disclose information to each other in connection with dashboard
functions only. That will support MaPS and the Pensions Regulator
in their pensions dashboards programme and compliance roles
respectively, and support the secure delivery of the ecosystem
and pensions dashboard services. The Data Protection Act 2018 and
General Data Protection Regulation duties continue to apply to
the sharing of information about an individual.
I will briefly revisit why we need pensions dashboards and their
potential to change people’s relationships with their pensions.
We know about the huge success that automatic enrolment had in
getting people saving into a pension, with millions of people now
saving. However, research has found that almost three quarters of
UK adults have multiple pensions, as people move around the
labour market throughout their working life. Some people may not
know either who their pension is with, what their pensions are
worth or how many pensions they have. Pensions dashboards have
the power to change all that.
We have conservatively estimated that reuniting people with lost
pensions could be worth £541 million to individuals over 10
years, and it could be much more. The Pensions Policy Institute
estimated in its most recent paper on lost pots that the total
value could be up to £26.6 billion. Instead of relying on a box
of paper under the stairs, pensions dashboards will help
individuals to find their lost and forgotten pensions quickly and
easily, and all in one place.
We are setting up a brand-new digital service that will connect
thousands of individual pensions schemes covering millions of
memberships. As Members may expect, a huge amount of work and
thought has gone into developing these regulations. We have
worked throughout with our delivery partners, the pensions
dashboards programme as part of the Money and
Pensions Service the Pensions Regulator, and the FCA. I
thank them all for their expert input into this cross-cutting
project. We have also gained insight from those in the pensions
industry and consumer groups through two public consultations and
other fora.
The delivery of pensions dashboards needs to be both timely and
operationally manageable for both the pensions dashboards
programme and the pensions industry. The regulations set out a
phased approach, known as staging, to connect different
categories of scheme to MaPS. By prioritising schemes in order of
type and membership size, we can maximise the member coverage on
pensions dashboards in the shortest possible timeframe. Schemes
will connect to the MaPS digital architecture, which is the
technology that underpins dashboards. The architecture, and all
parties and technical services that connect to it, form the
dashboard ecosystem.
All Members are eager to see dashboards made available to the
public. The point at which that will happen is referred to in the
regulations as the “Dashboards Available Point”. The Secretary of
State will issue a notice at least six months ahead of that
point, having considered matters such as the coverage of
memberships and service levels. This notice will give the
pensions industry time to prepare to answer queries resulting
from people engaging with their pensions information.
Lastly, it would be remiss of me not to update the House on the
delivery of this programme. I am pleased to say that the pensions
dashboards programme has delivered the digital architecture
underpinning this project, and it is currently testing and
refining the service in readiness for schemes to begin connecting
from April 2023. Early participants will begin connecting in the
new year. We are grateful to schemes for their co-operation,
which is helping to prepare the ground and setting an example for
others to follow.
I am satisfied that the draft Pensions Dashboards Regulations
2022 are compatible with the European convention on human rights.
Subject to the view of this House, the approval of the
regulations puts us one step closer to delivery for consumers. I
commend the regulations to the Committee.
9.31am
(Reading East) (Lab)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairship, Mrs Murray. These
important regulations potentially affect not only everybody in
this room, but everybody in the country, so it is vital that the
Government get them right. Labour supports the pensions
dashboards policy and today’s statutory instrument, which we hope
takes us a stage closer to fruition. However, I have some
important questions on both the general principle and some
specific points of detail on progress, which the Minister may
like to write to me about.
It goes without saying that large IT programmes are subject to a
certain amount of risk, and it is important that the Government
take that into account. Some of what the Minister said this
morning reassures me, but I have some further questions about
data quality. I obviously will not go into enormous detail,
because such matters are highly technical, but it would greatly
reassure pension savers to know a little more about the risk
management the Government are undertaking to protect data quality
and personal information and to ensure that data is accessible.
For example, people often change their name upon marriage or move
job multiple times during their working lives, all of which is
important to take into account, and the risk of fraud must be
minimised. I hope the Minister will be able to elaborate on those
points.
In addition, and in support of that previous point, I hope
sufficient time will be taken to test the roll-out of this
important approach. It involves a large amount of IT, complicated
data issues, and the matching up of different databases of
information on a large number of people.
I hope the Minister may be able to reassure me on one or two
specific points. Is it possible to let pension savers have a
better idea of the indexation of pensions? Some defined benefit
schemes are fully indexed with inflation, but others partially
follow inflation. During this cost of living crisis, it would be
of great reassurance to savers to know the future value of their
savings. I understand that the Department has so far decided not
to include that level of information, so might the Minister be
able to look into that and write to me?
I thank you, Mrs Murray, for the opportunity to speak this
morning, and I look forward to hearing more from the Minister in
due course.
9.34am
(Glasgow East) (SNP)
It is a pleasure to welcome the Minister to her new post. I know
she will do a great job.
I place on the record the SNP’s support for this statutory
instrument and will just develop a couple of thoughts on pensions
policy. Previously I was the spokesperson for work and pensions
and getting dragged into debates like this does feel a bit like
“Hotel California” sometimes. One thing I was quite struck by
when I was shadowing that post was the complete lack of pensions
literacy that exists not just across the country, but sometimes
even in the House of Commons.
The pensions dashboard is incredibly welcome; we all want to see
it, notwithstanding some of the shadow Minister’s points about
the delivery of the IT. If it is to be successful, however, we
need to look, in a twin-track way, at things such as making
Pension Wise a lot more freely available to folk. Far too many
people in their mid-50s are making decisions on pensions without
adequate advice and guidance. Frankly, they are making decisions
that are financially disadvantageous to them.
I also want a bit more reform of automatic enrolment. I would
like the age for automatic enrolment moved from 22 to 16. I left
school at 16 and started working, and it would be right and
proper for automatic enrolment to be rolled out to those who
start in the labour market straight away. I would also like to
see it rolled out from the first pound, rather than an arbitrary
threshold, but I appreciate that is not the purpose of today’s
debate.
When the Pension Schemes Act 2021 was being taken through
Parliament, the SNP expressed some concerns about commercial
organisations having access to the pensions dashboards. It is on
that basis that we would prefer that MaPS be allowed to run it
for the first year before we have the extra commercial interest
come into play, just as a way of consumer protection.
The instrument is to be welcomed, notwithstanding some of the
wider concerns that I have outlined. I very much hope that my
constituents, whether in Fullarton Park or right across the east
end of Glasgow, can have both dignity and prosperity in
retirement. Pensions dashboards will ultimately allow them to do
that and will give them a much more informed view of pensions,
which everybody across the country must have.
9.37am
I am grateful for both Opposition parties’ support for these
important regulations.
I will write to the hon. Member for Reading East on some of the
specifics, but will just cover some of his points. On the steps
being taken to ensure data accuracy on dashboards, it is
obviously crucial that the data in front of an individual is
accurate. Trustees and managers have existing legal obligations
relating to data quality, and all the data is obviously being
pulled from existing pension providers. The Pensions Regulator
has set out expectations on data quality in its record-keeping
guidance. This includes that data are measured at least once a
year. The regulator’s guidance on dashboards is also clear that
trustees and managers need to ensure that values provided are
accurate and urges them to work with administrators to improve
data if required.
I absolutely take the hon. Gentleman’s point about changes,
including to addresses. They are an issue throughout the pensions
system. It is something that we need to do a lot more work on,
but I will write back to him on that specific point.
As for testing and the preparedness of the pensions schemes,
schemes and administrators must act now, if they have not
already, to prepare their data and engage with administrators and
other suppliers on how they will meet their legal duties. The
Pensions Regulator has already published guidance on practical
steps that trustees and schemes managers should be taking now.
They are also writing to all pension schemes at least 12 months
ahead of the connection deadline with a call to action to ensure
that the data they use is accurate and complete. They will
contact schemes several times in the run-up to their duties to
help them remain on track. I had a meeting with the Pensions
Regulator yesterday to discuss exactly such issues, and I will
continue to have such meetings to ensure that it is providing all
the support it can to schemes.
On testing, there will be a lot of user testing—it is built into
the approach. The hon. Gentleman is completely right in his
caution about IT schemes. I am sure that he and I will correspond
regularly on that, and we need to build testing into the
programme.
The hon. Member for Glasgow East asked several questions, and I
thank him for his support. The lack of pensions literacy is a big
problem. It is, ironically, one of the things that has led to
automatic enrolment being a success, but we need to tread the
tightrope between making sure that people are as informed as
possible and making sure that they are building up their pension
pot. I would absolutely like to work with him on advice, guidance
and ensuring that people are making the best use of their pension
pot.
I should probably have a further conversation offline with the
hon. Gentleman about amending the age for automatic enrolment.
Automatic enrolment is a success, and we would like to see that
expanded, and I would like to have further conversations.
As for MaPS and the dashboard launch, we strongly believe that it
is important to have a Government-backed dashboard, and the
Government have committed to launching the Money and
Pensions Service dashboard from the “Dashboards Available
Point”. It will also be the point at which authorised qualifying
pensions dashboard services may begin to provide a pensions
dashboard service as well, but they are highly regulated, and
that again is something we can pick up further through the
process.
I know that colleagues across the House care passionately about
the success of pensions dashboards, and I thank all members of
the Committee for their contributions today. Pensions dashboards
will reunite individuals with their lost or forgotten pots and
engage potentially millions of savers. It is important that we
press ahead with this ambitious project so that savers can
realise the benefits. I therefore commend the regulations to the
Committee.
Question put and agreed to.
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