Some UK pension funds told to merge into ‘megafunds’ by 2030.

Jerry
By Jerry
2 Min Read

The UK government will tell some British pension schemes to merge to become ‘megafunds’ with at least 25 billion pounds ($34 billion) of assets by 2030, it said on Thursday, part of its wider drive to channel more investment into the economy.

The government also confirmed it would create a ‘backstop’ power to potentially force investment firms to meet set investment allocation targets if they fell short.

The controversial new power – which the government has previously indicated it may not need to use – has been criticized by some investment firms who say it risks worse outcomes for pension savers.

Planned reforms will require certain smaller pension schemes to merge, in a bid to emulate Australia and Canada’s pension systems that feature fewer, larger funds that are better able to invest at scale.

“We’re making pensions work for Britain. These reforms mean better returns for workers and billions more invested in clean energy and high-growth businesses,” finance minister Rachel Reeves said in a statement.

The UK government has been pursuing a range of policies to try to boost domestic investment, including signing up 17 investment firms to a pledge to pump 50 billion pounds of additional cash into UK businesses and infrastructure.

Penalties will be applied to pension funds that don’t meet the 25 billion pounds assets threshold by 2030, such as losing access to auto-enrollment contributions that would be diverted into larger schemes

Local government pension schemes will also be given investment targets, which the government said would help put 27.5 billion pounds into local projects. These schemes will also be told to combine assets split across more than 86 authorities into just six pools.

Source: Lse

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