Pension Schemes Bill [HL] Commons Amendments 4.57 pm Motion
on Amendment 1 Moved by Lord Henley That this
House do agree with the Commons in their Amendment 1. 1: Clause 1,
page 1, line 17, leave out “and” and insert “to” The Parliamentary
Under-Secretary of State, Department for Work and...Request free trial
Pension Schemes Bill [HL]
Commons Amendments
4.57 pm
Motion on Amendment 1
Moved by
1: Clause 1, page 1, line 17, leave out “and” and insert “to”
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The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Department for
Work and Pensions (Lord Henley) (Con)
My Lords, if it is convenient to the House I shall speak
also to Amendments 3, 4 and 20. The amendments largely
respond to points raised in debates in this House.
Amendments 1 and 20 address an unintended consequence of
the Bill and enable a scheme funder to engage in activities
in relation to any part of the scheme, not just the money
purchase section. I am grateful to the noble Lord, Lord
McKenzie, for drawing our attention to that issue.
Amendments 3 and 4 address the original requirement in the
Bill that the scheme funder must be a separate legal entity
and must only carry out activities directly relating to the
master trust scheme in question. Noble Lords and
stakeholders raised concerns about the impact of this
requirement on business.
First, the amendments enable scheme funders to operate more
than one master trust. Secondly, a new regulation-making
power will introduce some flexibility to the requirement
that scheme funders’ activities be limited to the master
trusts of which they are the scheme funder or prospective
funder by allowing exceptions subject to certain
requirements. For example, the regulations might require
that a scheme funder who carries out activities other than
those that relate to the master trust disclose information
similar to the financial reports in its management
accounts, so that the activities relating to the master
trust are distinct from other lines of business. The
regulations may also require, where a scheme funder is part
of group of companies, that information be disclosed about
the corporate structure of the group to the extent that it
affects the financing of the master trust.
5.00 pm
These regulations will be subject to the affirmative procedure on
the first occasion. I understand that the Delegated Powers and
Regulatory Reform Committee has today published its report on
this power and concluded that our explanation is not sufficient
as to why a different level of parliamentary scrutiny is
appropriate for later exercises than the first. Let me explain.
The regulations first exercising the power should be subject to
parliamentary scrutiny and debate, given the importance of the
scheme funder’s role in the financial sustainability of the
master trust and the potential impact of any requirements
prescribed in regulations on scheme funders. I have given some
examples today of how that power might be used.
After the first set of regulations have been brought into force,
the Government expect subsequent amendments to those regulations
to be relatively minor; for example, they might need to be
changed in future to keep pace with the evolving master trust
market. New financial arrangements between master trusts and
their scheme funders might require minor changes to the
regulations to ensure sufficient transparency for the Pensions
Regulator’s financial assessment. As a result, we think that the
affirmative resolution procedure would be disproportionate for
those further regulations.
Given the wide variety of master trust scheme structures and
arrangements with scheme funders, the department will work
closely with key stakeholders, as part of our ongoing
consultation, to develop the first set of regulations. We will
strike an appropriate balance between minimising the burdens on
business and providing the Pensions Regulator with the
appropriate level of transparency for its ongoing supervision of
the financial sustainability of the master trust scheme. I beg to
move.
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(Lab)
My Lords, I thank the Minister for introducing this first
group of Commons amendments—Amendments 1, 3, 4 and 20. By
way of background, we should acknowledge a degree of
consensus emerging on the Bill, which has indeed been
helped by the amendments before us today, which deal
directly with some of the concerns we raised earlier in the
parliamentary process.
This does not mean that we consider, as should have been
evident in the other place, that the Government are on top
of the entirety of the pensions landscape. There is more to
do on the level and transparency of charges; governance;
extending the benefits of auto-enrolment; and addressing
the lingering injustice felt by those women whose state
pension age was raised quicker than expected. Of course,
the Government will need to consider John Cridland’s
analysis of the state pension age, emerging issues from the
DB Green Paper, and the need to make progress on proposals
for the Money Advice Service, not to mention the continuing
combating of pension scams.
The Bill deals with a specific and technical issue and is
important to protecting millions of savers and billions of
pounds of savings, and we have sought to address it in
these terms. One of the criticisms of the Bill is its heavy
reliance on secondary legislation, although that has now
been changed to affirmative on first use, as we have just
heard. The aspiration, as we understand it—and the Minister
may confirm—is for this process to be completed during 2018
to enable all the provisions to be commenced. Doubtless
this timetable was contemplated without due regard to
Brexit. What is clear now is that an enormous amount of
legislation, mostly secondary, will be required to give
effect across government to our exiting the EU. Can the
Minister say what assessment has been made of the capacity
of government—indeed, of Parliament—to cope with all of
this? Will he undertake to publish a current timetable for
implementation of the Pension Schemes Bill?
We support Amendments 1 and 20, which as we have heard deal
with an unintended effect of the original drafting. It
would have required the scheme funder’s activities to
relate only to the money purchase benefits aspect of each
scheme that is a mixed-benefit scheme.
As the Minister has outlined, Amendments 3 and 4 deal with
Clause 11 and the scheme funder requirements. This clause
generated considerable debate in your Lordships’ House and
in the other place, as the Minister again acknowledged.
This was not about challenging the policy, which quite
properly seeks to ensure that the financial position of
scheme funders and their financial arrangements with master
trusts are transparent and clear to the regulator. The
concern raised by a number of noble Lords as well as
stakeholders was that the original requirement for separate
legal entities and activities relating to just one master
trust scheme were too restrictive, could force costly
corporate restructuring and could detract from market
opportunities to consolidate.
The remedy proposed is to allow the scheme funder to carry
out activities that relate to more than one master trust
and for the Secretary of State to have power to make
regulations to except a scheme funder from the requirement
that it must carry out only activities directly related to
master trust schemes for which it is a scheme funder. The
power can be used where a scheme funder meets additional
requirements relating to its financial position, its
arrangements with the master trust involved and its
business activities. The regulations can also enable
application by the relevant master trust scheme to seek to
satisfy the regulator that the scheme is financially
viable.
On the face of it, these amendments potentially enable
concerns about shared services, FCA-regulated entities and
consolidation opportunities to be addressed, but it would
be helpful if the Minister put further flesh on the bones
of how he sees these relaxations being used. As we
expected, he has addressed the Delegated Powers and
Regulatory Reform Committee’s requiring a more convincing
explanation of why these regulations should be subject to
the affirmative procedure on first use—bearing in mind that
this is the case in a number of places in the Bill. Subject
to any final matter the Minister may raise, we are inclined
to support these amendments as they demonstrate that the
Government have been listening to the genuine concerns
about what the original Clause 11 would have generated.
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My Lords, I am most grateful to the noble Lord, Lord
McKenzie, for the constructive approach he has taken to
this group of amendments. I hope that this will continue
for the rest of this consideration of Commons amendments.
He raised various points about Cridland and the state
pension age, which go wider than the Bill at the moment. I
will not respond to those points but he made an important
point about the degree of secondary legislation that will
come forward not purely from the Department for Work and
Pensions but from across government—he meant later this
year, I presume, and throughout next year. He wondered
whether we hoped to get all of it completed by 2018. I
believe that we do but it will obviously be quite a trying
matter. We will want to continue to engage with the
regulator, the pension industry and other stakeholders
throughout the year. That will be followed by formal
consultation on those draft regulations, which we currently
hope to get early next year so that we can get them coming
into force from 2018.
What pressure there will be on this House and another place
from all the various primary and secondary legislation
coming before us is probably beyond the noble Lord’s pay
grade, and certainly beyond mine. However, I am sure that
the usual channels will discuss that and ensure that we
give appropriate coverage to all these matters.
As to the detailed timetable of all that consultation with
the regulator and pension stakeholders, the noble Lord
asked for a table, but it might be helpful it I write him a
short letter setting that out, if there is anything that I
can add to what I have said. We aim to have those
regulations coming into force from 2018, and nothing that I
have seen so far seems to suggest that we will not be able
to meet that. I think we can go ahead and agree these
amendments. I hope the noble Lord will accept that.
Motion agreed.
Motion on Amendment 2
Moved by
2: Clause 9 leave out Clause 9
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My Lords, it will be convenient to take Amendments 5 to 19
at this stage. In the other place, Amendment 2 resulted in
the removal of Clause 9, which had been inserted in this
House after a vote on Report on an amendment tabled by the
noble Baroness, Lady Drake. It provided for a scheme funder
of last resort to meet costs where a master trust is being
wound up without the necessary funds to transfer the
accrued benefits. It remains the Government’s view that
this provision is simply not required. I do not want to go
through all the arguments put forward by my noble friends
Lord Young and who took this Bill
through the vast majority of its stages late last year. The
Bill requires that in order to operate, a master trust must
be authorised. The authorisation criteria include that the
master trust must be financially sustainable and have
sufficient systems and processes for the running of the
scheme. To meet the financial sustainability requirement,
the scheme will, among other things, need to provide
evidence to the Pensions Regulator that it has sufficient
funds to meet the costs of wind up. It will also have to
provide evidence that it has sufficient systems and
processes, which will include its arrangements for holding
accurate records on its members and the rights and benefits
to which they are entitled. The Pensions Regulator will
carry out ongoing supervision of master trusts. The schemes
will be required periodically to provide the Pensions
Regulator with information on its financial resources and
administration to enable the Pensions Regulator to be
satisfied that the funding remains adequate and the systems
and processes robust. A scheme funder of last resort would
therefore be required only if this whole approach to
regulation fails in some catastrophic way. I have no reason
to believe that it is likely to do so.
Amendments 5 to 19 concern the provisions in the Bill for a
master trust that is going to wind up; they are intended to
address concerns that were raised in earlier debates in
this House that finding another master trust to take
members on may be difficult. The amendments allow
regulations to provide that master trusts that are to be
wound up under continuity option 1 can transfer their
members’ accrued rights and benefits to a pension scheme
other than a master trust. In addition, the same
restrictions in the Bill on new or increased charges being
applied to a master trust receiving scheme could be applied
by regulations to that non-master trust receiving scheme.
In introducing these amendments in another place, my
honourable friend the Minister for Pensions said:
“The non-master trust receiving scheme would be made
subject to exactly the same restrictions on increasing or
introducing new charges as those to which master trust
receiving schemes are subject”.—[Official Report, Commons,
Pension Schemes Bill Committee, 7/2/17; col. 65.]
The amendments allow for regulations to be made that would
widen the potential destinations to which members of a
master trust being wound up can be transferred, while
ensuring that their savings cannot be used to fund the
costs of that transfer. In another place, my honourable
friend the Minister for Pensions explained:
“Allowing other types of pension schemes to receive
transferred members, as long as they meet specified
requirements, could increase the options available to
trustees, introduce extra flexibility and widen the market
for potential schemes. This might be useful if trustees
found that they were struggling to find somewhere
appropriate for their members’ rights, which might
particularly benefit members using decumulation options.
Being able to increase the options in future might help
reduce the risk that trustees of failing master trusts
might not be able to find another master trust to take
their members on ”.—[Official Report, Commons, Pension
Schemes Bill Committee, 7/2/17; col. 66.]
Amendments 5 to 19 are therefore primarily useful in
future-proofing this aspect of the authorisation regime,
and will be used as and when developments in the market
give rise to a need for them. Not to include them in the
Bill at this stage could unnecessarily restrict the market
for members’ rights and benefits to their detriment. I beg
to move.
5.15 pm
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(Lab)
My Lords, the Bill, in strengthening the regulation of
master trusts, is indeed welcome. I noted that a recent
release by the ONS on funded pensions and insurance in the
UK national accounts referred to the significance of the
establishment of DC master trusts, so in general there is
increasing recognition of the importance of having
fit-for-purpose regulation of master trusts. However, the
government amendments in this group raise certain questions
that I would like to put to the Minister.
Amendment 2 to Clause 9 simply deletes the provision for a
funder of last resort. That is disappointing. Will the
Minister update the House on what further action the
Government have taken since the Bill was last considered by
this House to address the protection of scheme member
benefits in the event of a master trust winding up with
insufficient resources to meet the cost of complying with
and obligations under the Bill? The noble Lord, , implied that there
was ongoing work and discussions with the industry, so it
would be helpful to know what actions have been taken.
The other government amendments in this group, to Clauses
25 and 34, addressed the issue of allowing, in a wind-up on
failure, the transfer of scheme members and their benefits
to a receiving scheme that is not a master trust—for
example, a group personal pension. While not wanting to
disagree in principle with widening the pool of schemes to
which transfers can be made, I think that that change to
the Bill raises some questions. Given that the Pensions
Regulator will be authorising a transfer to a scheme that
has not been subject to the master trust authorisation
regime, how will it satisfy itself that the receiving
scheme on transfer is both sustainable and well governed?
The Bill provides under Clause 34 for a prohibition on
increasing or imposing new charges on members by either the
transferring or the receiving scheme in order to meet the
cost of resolving failure. As a non-master trust receiving
scheme will not have been subject to the authorisation
regime and the continuity and implementation strategy
requirements in the Bill, how will the Pensions Regulator
apply the prohibition on increasing charges and police it
after the transfer of members to a non-master trust, given
that the receiving scheme will not be in its regulatory
jurisdiction?
Government Amendment 13 provides for regulations to allow
for transfers from a master trust to a contract-based
scheme. Given that the transfer will be from a trust to a
contract arrangement, do the Government consider that there
are any special considerations that the regulations will
need to address? If so, what are they?
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(Con)
My Lords, I welcome much of the thrust of the Bill. I am
also delighted to see Amendments 3 and 4, which, I hope,
ensure that insured master trusts will not be forced to
separate from their insurance parent, which would have
forced them to face higher costs and reduced the security
of their members. I am very grateful to my noble friend for
taking on board the comments made during the Bill’s passage
through this House.
It strikes me that Amendment 2 should be considered
separately from those to which it has been joined. I
reiterate my strong concern—notwithstanding the
reassurances from my noble friend—about leaving out Clause
9. I understand that there is a view that it is unnecessary
and that the new regime will ensure that master trusts have
sufficient resources, are financially sustainable and have
capital adequacy in place. However, even with new schemes
and the best will in the world, capital adequacy tests may
prove inadequate. No provision in the Bill would cover
members of a very large pension scheme that suffered a
catastrophic computer failure and lost member records. The
cost of restoring that could be well above the capital
adequacy put in place, and nothing in the Bill explains
where the cost of restoring those records would be covered.
The only place might be the members’ pots themselves, which
is not supposed to happen.
I vividly recall assurances given by Ministers on defined
benefit schemes during the 1990s, when the minimum funding
requirement was supposed to ensure that schemes would
always have enough money to pay pensions. No one foresaw
the problems evident in the early 2000s, when schemes that
had met MFR legislation wound up and ended up without
enough money to pay any money to some members on the
pensions that they were owed.
Even more concerning than that is that the Bill is being
introduced when 80 or so master trusts are already in
existence in the market with a huge number of members
across the country already saving in a pension. These
trusts have not been subject to the capital adequacy test
or other tests that the Bill will rightly introduce. What
is the protection for members of existing schemes who are
saving in good faith? They are not protected at all. That
was why I was very pleased that we passed the amendment
concerning the scheme funder of last resort. I echo the
question of the noble Baroness, Lady Drake: what
discussions have taken place with the industry to find a
solution to cover the eventuality—we do not expect it and
it is, I admit, a small probability—that an existing master
trust winds up without enough funding to cover the costs of
administration to sort out its records and transfer them
over to another scheme? I should be grateful for some
information from my noble friend about whether there are
ongoing discussions and how the department sees that
eventuality being covered: where would the money be found?
On Amendments 5 to 19, I share some of the reservations
mentioned by the noble Baroness, Lady Drake, such as the
regulatory disparity between a master trust, which would be
regulated by the Pensions Regulator—and therefore under its
control, if you like —and a master trust transferred under
the amendments to a pension scheme regulated by the
Financial Conduct Authority. How would the regulatory
systems work together when they are under different
legislation?
I have other concerns, but I may raise them under the next
group.
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My Lords, let me start by expressing our regret that the
requirement for there to be a funder of last
resort—successfully pressed by my noble friend Lady Drake
on Report—has been deleted from the Bill. That concern was
also expressed by the noble Baroness, Lady Altmann. We of
course accept that the whole purpose of the Bill—its
protections, including capital adequacy, financial
sustainability, systems requirements, scheme funder and
transfer regime—is to secure people’s pension pots,
militate against scheme failure, and ensure good order when
difficulties arise. But as my noble friend asserted on
Report, notwithstanding this, it cannot be guaranteed that
a master trust will not fail and when it does there will be
an available master trust to step into the breach so that
members’ funds are protected. The noble Baroness, Lady
Altmann, has just expressed similar concerns with vivid
potential examples.
In seeking to resist the funder of last resort proposition,
the noble Lord, , claimed that it
would be costly and a disproportional response to the issue
and with moral hazard implications—arguments deployed by
the Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Pensions in
the other place. We remain unconvinced of these arguments
when put in the balance against the importance of
protecting people’s savings. Nevertheless, we need to
examine how the Commons amendments to Clauses 25 and 34
contribute to ameliorating this risk, which at least
potentially they do.
We acknowledge the amendments to Clauses 25 and 34 which
potentially widen the scope of continuity option 1 and
expand the prohibition on increasing administration charges
or imposing new administration charges. In particular, they
raise the prospect of the accrued rights and benefits under
a master trust scheme being transferred to an alternative
pension scheme which is not a master trust. No detail is
offered in the amendment about the likely characteristics
of an alternative pension, other than the fact that it must
be a pension scheme under the 1993 Act. This of course will
include both personal and occupational pension schemes.
Regulations will spell out the circumstances when the
alternative might be available, and the characteristics of
an alternative scheme. Regulations will also spell out how
such an option is to be pursued.
While we can see the benefits of a potentially wider pool
of pension schemes which could be available in the event of
a master trust failure, it begs a number of questions about
how any alternative scheme would be regulated and what
protection it would offer members. My noble friend Lady
Drake, in particular, as ever has produced some forensic
questions to seek at least some clarity on key issues:
further actions and discussions that have taken place;
whether a receiving alternative scheme is sustainable and
well governed; how such a scheme can operate a prohibition
on increasing charges and preventing members’ funds from
being accessed; and consideration of how bulk transfers
would work. The noble Baroness, Lady Altmann, joined in the
same sort of inquiry.
It remains to be seen how much these amendments provide a
real opportunity to add a layer of protection and whether
the market will offer up alternative schemes which can
assist. We look forward to the Minister’s reply, but we are
not minded to oppose these amendments.
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I start by offering my thanks to the noble Lord for making
it clear that he is not minded to oppose these amendments.
I understand that noble Lords felt quite strongly about
their amendments and for that reason wanted them in the
Bill to be considered by another place. The other place has
considered those amendments and we now have this
opportunity for further debate. We can then get on with
seeing the Bill on to the statute book.
Before dealing with the questions, I shall respond to the
brief point made by my noble friend Lady Altmann about not
being happy with the groupings. The groupings are a largely
informal matter, sorted out by the usual channels. To my
knowledge—and I think that it was probably done in
discussion with the Opposition—they have changed a number
of times, but that is not unusual. Very often we get it
wrong in how things are grouped. But as is made clear on
the bit of paper that comes to the House every day,
groupings are an informal matter, and it is always open to
all noble Lords to intervene on any appropriate amendment
at the appropriate stage.
5.30 pm
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I am grateful to the noble Lord. It is a matter that is
possibly more in the hands of the Opposition than those of
anyone else—but it is also a matter for all other Members
of the House to put in their views, if they wish. The
groupings are designed purely to assist the House and, as
the mantra makes clear, they are informal and can be broken
by any noble Lord.
A number of questions were put forward by the noble
Baroness, Lady Drake. Again, I commend her for all the work
on this Bill; I am grateful that it was largely my noble
friends Lord Young and who had to deal with
her expertise at those earlier stages, rather than myself.
I come to it late, and have learned a certain amount in the
course of proceedings—and, no doubt, I shall learn more in
due course, particularly when we get to the regulations
referred to earlier.
I come to the first of the noble Baroness’s questions, when
she asked what further plans the department had for how
things would be taken forward. My honourable friend the
Minister for Pensions, who takes this Bill and all within
it very seriously, referred in Committee to conversations
that he had with representatives of certain pension funds
who were then contemplating a system for allocation among
themselves of any master trust that was going to wind up,
if the market did not provide a proper destination. Those
discussions will continue and, no doubt, my honourable
friend, if he has any further points, will be able to speak
to my noble friend Lady Altmann and others who have
concerns.
My noble friend Lady Altmann was also worried about the
confidence that we had that the risk of a master trust
failing in a catastrophic manner is very low. I would still
maintain that, and I think so would my honourable friend.
The Pensions Regulator has been working very closely with
the master trusts, and the work certainly gives us all in
the department the comfort that the risk is low. The
regulator continues to proactively assess the level of risk
in the master trust market, and so will be alert to any
changes. We hope that the regulator will publish
information, including on confidence in the levels
available in due course.
The noble Baroness, Lady Drake, also raised the question of
how the Government will be satisfied that the receiving
scheme is sustainable and well governed. Any receiving
scheme would have to be regulated by the appropriate
regulator; all the occupational schemes will be overseen by
the Pensions Regulator and all the contract schemes will be
regulated by the FCA. We hope that that will provide the
appropriate coverage.
Finally, the noble Baroness asked about the Pensions
Regulator and how it would apply the prohibition. The Bill
provides the power to legislate on restrictions on charges
in non-master trust receiving schemes. How those
restrictions on charges would operate where the receiving
scheme was not regulated by the Pensions Regulator would
form part of future discussions if these regulations were
considered to be necessary. For instance, if the scheme was
regulated by the FCA, there would be discussions with the
FCA about how to achieve this.
As the regulator of the exiting scheme, the Pensions
Regulator would have responsibility and oversight over this
scheme’s actions. The master trust pursuing continuity
option 1 will have to set out in its implementation
strategy which scheme it intends to use as its receiving
scheme. The exiting master trust will have its
implementation strategy approved by the Pensions Regulator,
which also has the power to direct the trustees of the
exiting master trust where they are failing to comply with
their duties under the Bill. While the Pensions Regulator
may not be the regulator of the receiving scheme, it will
have oversight and powers it can use in that situation.
I hope that that deals largely with most of the questions.
If there is anything I have failed to address, obviously, I
will write. However, there will be further opportunities as
we consult on those regulations over the coming year and
next year to deal with these matters. Again, I give the
assurance that my honourable friend the Minister for
Pensions, as well as my right honourable friend the
Secretary of State, will keep all this in mind and will be
open to all comments that noble Lords wish to make.
Motion agreed.
Motion on Amendments 3 to 20
Moved by
3: Clause 11, page 7, line 7, leave out subsections (2) and (3)
and insert—
“(2) The first requirement is that the scheme funder is a body
corporate or a partnership that is a legal person under the law
by which it governed.
(3) The second requirement is that the scheme funder only carries
out activities that relate directly to Master Trust schemes in
relation to which it is a scheme funder or prospective scheme
funder.
(3A) The Secretary of State may make regulations providing for
exceptions from the second requirement.
(3B) The regulations may include provision excepting a scheme
funder from the second requirement—
(a) where the scheme funder meets additional requirements
specified in the regulations (such as requirements relating to a
scheme funder’s financial position, its financial arrangements
with the Master Trust scheme in question or its business
activities);
(b) where the scheme funder applies to the Regulator and provides
the Regulator with information specified in the regulations, or
such other information as the Regulator may require in order to
satisfy the Regulator that the Master Trust scheme is financially
sustainable.”
4: Clause 11, page 7, line 20, leave out subsection (6) and
insert—
“( ) The first regulations that are made under subsection (3A)
are subject to affirmative resolution procedure.
( ) Any subsequent regulations under subsection (3A), and
regulations under subsection (4), are subject to negative
resolution procedure.”
5: Clause 25, page 17, line 21, leave out “Master Trust” and
insert “pension”
6: Clause 25, page 17, line 23, leave out “subsection” and insert
“subsections (1A)(b) and”
7: Clause 25, page 17, line 24, after “the” insert “Master Trust”
8: Clause 25, page 17, line 27, at end insert—
“(1A) Each pension scheme proposed under subsection (1)(a) must
be—
(a) a Master Trust scheme, or
(b) in such circumstances as may be specified in regulations made
by the Secretary of State, a pension scheme that has
characteristics specified in regulations made by the Secretary of
State (“an alternative scheme”).”
9: Clause 25, page 17, line 28, leave out “The notification”
insert “Notification under subsection
(1)(b)”
10: Clause 25, page 17, line 33, leave out subsection (3) and
insert—
“(3) The Secretary of State—
(a) must make regulations about how continuity option 1 is to be
pursued, in a case where a proposed transfer is to a Master Trust
scheme;
(b) may make regulations about how continuity option 1 is to be
pursued, in a case where a proposed transfer is to an alternative
scheme;
(c) may make regulations for the purpose of otherwise giving
effect to continuity option 1, in either case.”
11: Clause 25, page 18, line 29, leave out “receiving”
12: Clause 25, page 18, line 37, at end insert—
“(4A) Regulations under subsection (3)(b) may include—
(a) any provision mentioned in subsection (4);
(b) provision deeming any member whose accrued rights or benefits
are to be transferred to an alternative scheme to have entered
into an agreement with a person of a description specified in the
regulations.”
13: Clause 25, page 18, line 46, leave out “subsection” and
insert “subsections (1A)(b) and”
14: Clause 34, page 23, line 41, after “scheme” insert “that is a
Master Trust scheme”
15: Clause 34, page 24, line 16, at end insert—
“(5A) The Secretary of State may by regulations apply some or all
of the provisions of this section to a receiving scheme that has
characteristics specified in regulations under section
25(1A)(b).”
16: Clause 34, page 24, line 20, leave out “Master Trust” and
insert “pension”
17: Clause 34, page 24, line 28, at end insert—
“(7A) Regulations under subsection (5A) are subject to
affirmative resolution procedure.”
18: Clause 34, page 24, line 29, at beginning insert “Other”
19: Clause 40, page 28, line 15, at end insert—
““pension scheme” has the meaning given by section 1(5) of the
Pension Schemes Act 1993;”
20: Clause 40, page 28, line 35, at end insert—
“(2A) The reference in section 11(3) to activities that relate
directly to Master Trust schemes is, in its application to a
Master Trust scheme which provides money purchase benefits in
conjunction with other benefits, to be read as a reference to
activities that relate directly to the scheme as a whole.”
Motion agreed.
Motion on Amendment 21
Moved by
21: Clause 46, page 31, line 3, leave out subsection (2)
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My Lords, before the Bill passes through, I will make a
couple of observations. Perhaps the Minister, who will not
have the answers now, might write to me to allay some of my
concerns that I will put on the record about the Bill.
The first regards net pay schemes being used for
auto-enrolment as master trusts for low earners, who cannot
get tax relief so they end up paying 25% more for their
pensions. These low earners, who are probably mostly women,
are the ones who surely most need extra money yet are
unable to receive it. There is nothing in the master trust
framework that will require employers to ensure that low
earners are not enrolled into such schemes. Indeed, one
pension scheme—NOW: Pensions—is reimbursing members for the
tax relief they have lost, which is fine; they are not out
of pocket.
The second issue on which my noble friend might be able to
write to me is that I remain concerned that during a pause
order, members may in fact lose entirely their entitlement
to an auto-enrolment pension building up for them—for an
indefinite period, because we do not know how long the
pause order can last.
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My Lords, I am not sure that I have ever spoken on a
privilege amendment before, but I have noted what my noble
friend had to say and I promise to write to her. I beg to
move.
Motion agreed.
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