This blog sides with the Government in its intentions for better pensions and a better Britain. I do not see the Pensions Investment Review as nationalisation but of partnership which brings the voice of silent tax-payers to the table. It makes extensive use of Hymans recent paper but recognises concerns from David Fairs, John Hamilton and others that this is a “slippery slope”. It is , IMO, a move to partnership not nationalisation.

First the politics – let’s air it and get beyond it
In the press release that accompanies the Government’s response to the Pension Investment Review’s findings, there is a clear signal to anyone interested, that this is a Government , not just a DWP response. This is a response from Government
I’ve listened to Guy Opperman, the longstanding Pension Minister under a Conservative Government. I can’t remember any publication that came from the DWP about pensions that was fronted by him or backed by the Government in this way. I mentioned that Torsten Bell said he spoke for the Chancellor and Prime Minister when he spoke to the PLSA in Edinburgh.
The reality is that the Conservative Government did very little to advance pensions beyond widening saving through AE. What we have in the Pension Investment Review is a set of proposals , drawn up by Jo Gibson (formerly DWP now HMT), with the backing of Rayner and Reeve and the foreword of a leading political thinker who is (for now) pension minister.
There is powerful opposition to the proposals, not so much to mega-funds but more to Government intervention in the investment of private and public funded pensions.
In a perfect world, there would be harmony over Government initiatives but there is not harmony over the Government’s intentions and it is capturing the professional pension headlines.
David was head of policy at TPR, he has been Britain’s spokesperson for consulting actuaries and he is now a Partner at LCP, he is not to be ignored or confronted over his views.
My comments are simple, pensions are where they are thanks to investment not just by employers and savers but from the tax office.
We take with one hand but are reluctant to invest with another.
The Government is coming to the table and asking that pensions help the country and the tax-office/payer to meet the bills. We must play our part in this partnership, if it means investing in our nation’s enterprise, pensions should see it as a partnership not intervention (bordering on nationalisation).

Using pension scheme surplus for more productive investment is a pifflingly small ambition. A collectively invested pension scheme which is open to new entrants is capable of investing most of its assets in long term productive investment. There is a dearth of pension (as opposed to pot) provision in the private sector. If a pension scheme is not open to new entrants there’s been a failure (probably falling on many parties) to find a good solution.