Untapping the surplus power of DB pensions – DWP and Minister speak.

I am pleased to read the press release from the DWP which I publish in full, I was in a  Professional Pension meeting when it was published yesterday but can confirm considerably more interest running schemes on to pay better benefits to members.


Press release from the DWP

Record pension scheme funding means up to £160 billion ready to boost growth

The reforms will support the Government’s Plan for Change by boosting economic growth and securing the financial future of millions of UK savers.

  • Funding levels in the Defined Benefit (DB) pension sector have hit a record high, with three in four now in surplus and deficit payments down by over £10 billion a year
  • Increased resilience follows years of businesses creating security for members through building a larger surplus.
  • New freedoms to safely release surplus funding will unlock investments and benefit savers as part of the Government’s Plan for Change.

Working people, pension scheme members and businesses are set to benefit from record highs in pension scheme funding.

The majority of DB schemes are now running at a surplus which means the value of their assets exceed that of the promised pension benefits due to members.

Thanks to the forthcoming Pension Schemes Bill – trustees and employers will soon be able to safely release part of this surplus to boost investment and benefit scheme members.

Funding levels for DB pension schemes, sometimes known as “Final Salary” pensions, are current in their strongest ever financial position with the number of DB schemes sufficiently financed tripling since 2010.

Minister for Pensions, Torsten Bell, said:

The record funding levels for Defined Benefit pension schemes is excellent news for Britain’s employers and workers.

Fast falling deficit payments offer employers a cashflow boost of over £10 billion a year, that can support higher wages and investment.

And growing scheme surpluses can also be used productively. Currently some trustees are held back from sharing the benefits of a surplus, but our plans will allow all schemes to safely do so, delivering greater investment across firms and benefits for savers.

In 2019, just 600 Defined Benefit schemes were financed sufficiently, meaning businesses could meet the costs associated with their schemes without dipping into operational budgets – by 2024 that figure had tripled to over 1,800.

Because of this robust financial position, the additional payments businesses have had to pay to plug pension deficits has fallen from £16 billion in 2010 to under £5 billion in 2024. This is delivering an immediate cashflow benefit to firms and should support higher levels of investment and wages.

The funding position of schemes in deficit has improved significantly, from a collective deficit of £500bn in 2019 to a deficit of just £140bn in 2024. Schemes running at a surplus have seen their collective surplus now rise to more than £160bn. Currently, many schemes cannot access their surplus – but the forthcoming Pension Schemes Bill will allow Pension trustees and the sponsoring employers to safely release some surplus to invest back into their businesses and unlock more money for pension scheme members. The upcoming changes will focus on member protection, and trustees will continue to be required to fulfil their duties towards scheme beneficiaries.

These changes form part of a package of reforms in the upcoming Pension Schemes Bill that will secure the financial future of millions of UK savers and drive long-term economic prosperity.

Additional Information

About henry tapper

Founder of the Pension PlayPen,, partner of Stella, father of Olly . I am the Pension Plowman
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4 Responses to Untapping the surplus power of DB pensions – DWP and Minister speak.

  1. adventurousimpossibly5af21b6a13 says:

    DWP is repeating TPR and PPF figures in this press release. Unfortunately those figures do not bear close scrutiny. The estimated asset figure at September 2024 they report is £1240 billion but the ONS survey at that date reports just £1057 billion.

    The surplus figures reported by TPR at that September date are: TPs £207 billion. Lo-Dependency £137 billion and Buy-out £7 billion. If we assume that TPR’s liability estimates are correct (and there are reasons to believe they are low) the aggregate surpluses are TPs £20 billion, Lo-Dep -£46 billion (deficit( and Buy-out -£176 billion.

    It seems that there will be much disappointment. With the increases in gilt yields in recent days, asset values have fallen yet more – by our modelling below £1 trillion.

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