Solvency II will kill final salary pensions, says NAPF

Author: Jenna Towler
IFAonline | 13 Feb 2012 | 12:30

Categories: Investment| Regulation

Topics: NAPF| European Insurance and Occupational Pensions Authority (EIOPA)| TUC| CBI| Solvency II

European commission

Solvency II will force all remaining defined benefit (DB) pension schemes to close and could lead to significant job losses as UK companies fold, lobby groups have warned.

The National Association of Pension Funds (NAPF), the Trades Union Congress (TUC) and Confederation of British Industry (CB) joined forces today to persuade European policymakers not to make pension schemes subject to Solvency II funding requirements.

The trio has written a joint letter to the President of the European Commission, José Manuel Barroso, and commissioners Barnier, Andor and Rehn.

The letter comes as European Insurance and Occupational Pensions Authority (EIOPA) is due to send its advice on the directive to the EU Commission.

The NAPF said there was a "strong risk" it will recommend Solvency II as a framework for the directive.

The joint letter said: "By demanding dramatic increases in funding from employers, the commission's plans would at best force all remaining DB schemes to close and at worst push many businesses into insolvency, leading to significant job losses.

"Far from benefiting employees and protecting scheme members, this would create a system in which job creation would be seriously hurt and pension provision inevitably damaged."

The letter said Solvency II would force companies to divert cash earmarked for investment, growth and job creation into pension schemes.

It added the move would also significantly change scheme investment patterns, with massive outflows from equities into risk-free assets such as gilts.

"Less equity investment would restrict capital flows to businesses, at a time when they are being asked to put even more cash into schemes," the letter said.

"With European pension funds holding over £2.5trn in assets, a major switch in asset allocation would have an immediate catastrophic impact on the stability of European financial markets."

The organisations also said they were "deeply concerned" the commission had failed to carry out a comprehensive quantitative impact assessment on its proposals.

NAPF chief executive Joanne Segars, TUC general secretary Brendan Barber and CBI chief policy director Katja Hall all signed the letter.

More investment news

Recommended reading

Categories

Topics

Comments

There are no comments submitted yet. Do you have an interesting opinion? Then be the first to post a comment

Related articles

Most Read

Audio / Visual

Coffee Lounge

View all the winners here

PPR Structured Product Awards 2011

View all the winners here

This year we have 14 awards designed to mark out the very best products in a highly competitive and innovative market. This includes three new awards for 2011 to reflect the developments in this rapidly growing market: Best Dual/Multi-Index Product, Best Structured (Oeic) Fund and Best Structured Product Provider.

Events

event logo

International Fund & Product Awards 2012

14 Jun 2012 - 14 Jun 2012

London, UK

event logo

British Mortgage Awards 2012

03 Jul 2012 - 03 Jul 2012

London, UK

event logo

Cover Webinars

04 Jul 2012 - 04 Jul 2012

London, UK

Poll

Are you more likely to use a Structured Product for:

In Focus

Viewpoints