UK Parliament: MPs publish report on State Pension reforms

04 April 2013

In a report published today, the Work and Pensions Committee welcomes the improvements in retirement income that the new Single-tier State Pension will bring.

The Committee warns, however, that the key to the policy’s successful implementation lies in the Government informing the public as soon as possible about how it will affect individuals. 

Commenting on the Report, Dame Anne Begg MP, Chair of the Work and Pensions Select Committee, said: "We support the principle of the Single-tier Pension (STP). In the short to medium term it will mean more State Pension for many people, particularly the self-employed, and women and carers who have been low-earners or had gaps in employment."

"It will be a much simpler system to understand and people will be able to see more clearly how much they can expect from the State.  As a result, it will give greater certainty about the value of saving into a private pension scheme and will complement the new system of automatic enrolment into workplace pensions.

"But this is a major reform which will affect all 40 million people of working age. Although the end result will be simplification, the transition period will be long and complex.

"Individuals will be affected in different ways depending on a number of factors, including their age, and their previous pension and National Insurance contributions.  There are already misconceptions about who stands to gain and who might lose. People closest to retirement understandably have the most immediate concerns. So it is vital that the Government decides on its high-level strategy for communicating the changes to the public by the time the finalised Bill comes before Parliament in the summer. This should include how the internet will be used and what individualised information will be provided.

"Now that the implementation date has been brought forward to 2016, it is even more important that people receive understandable and accurate information as early as possible."

The Committee criticises the Government for hampering its scrutiny of the proposals for a Single-tier State Pension. The Report notes that the Government not only imposed an extremely tight timetable, but brought forward the implementation date by a year, after the Committee had completed taking evidence. 

Dame Anne Begg MP said: "We agreed to the Government’s request that we carry out pre-legislative scrutiny of the Single-tier proposals. This process is a vital mechanism in ensuring that significant reforms receive rigorous and effective scrutiny.

"I am disappointed that the Government has hampered us in carrying out this task, by giving us very little time to do it, due to the delays in its own timetable for publishing the proposals, and then making a major change to the policy at a very late stage. Such a cavalier attitude to the scrutiny role of select committees is unacceptable. Nevertheless, we believe our recommendations are valid and that our findings will assist Parliament when it considers the finalised Bill in the summer.

"However, Parliament can only carry out effective scrutiny if the Government makes the necessary information available to it. It is imperative that the Government carries out a further Impact Assessment of the reform proposals, which takes particular account of the revised implementation date, and publishes it at the same time as the finalised Bill is introduced."

The report highlights that the change in the implementation date has significant implications, particularly for pension schemes and employers, who now have one year less to prepare for the ending of contacting-out. The Committee says that the Government must work with them to ensure the transition is as smooth as possible and that Defined Benefit pension schemes do not suffer as a result.

Conclusions and recommendations

The Report makes a number of other conclusions and recommendations, including:

On the revised implementation date

On the number of qualifying years

On the rate of the Single-tier Pension

On means-tested support and passported benefits

Women born 1952-1953

On State Pension entitlement based on spouse’s NI contributions

Press release

Report: The Single-tier State Pension


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