All Aries Insight articles – Page 2
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Features
Go-Ahead pension scheme moves from RPI to CPI
Transport operator Go-Ahead has cut its pension liabilities by about £40m by changing the inflation measure used for its bus workers’ final salary scheme.
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News
Government lowers mastertrust authorisation fees
The government has announced that proposed fees for mastertrust schemes seeking authorisation have been revised downwards.
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News
Cold-call ban needs hefty fines to work, experts say
The government's decision to speed up its ban on cold calls and emails related to pensions must be supported by credible regulations and deterrent fines if consumers are to be protected, industry commentators have said.
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Opinion
IORP II marks an underwhelming farewell from the EU
The EU’s new directive on pension funds will see schemes producing benefit statements on a yearly basis, while risk-management standards will be dragged up and borders broken down, but the overall impact will be limited.
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News
Worker status at centre of draft bill on gig economy
The Work and Pensions Committee and the Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy Committee have published a draft bill and a report on workers’ rights and the gig economy.
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Opinion
A cold call ban is not the most effective scams measure
Ian Neale from policy specialists Aries Insight takes a closer look at the government’s proposals on banning pension cold calls.
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News
Government defeated over delays to cold-calling ban
The government was defeated in the House of Lords on Wednesday night by an amendment to the financial guidance and claims bill, which sought to bring forward plans to ban pensions cold-calling.
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News
HMRC abandons VAT policy on insurer exemption
HM Revenue & Customs has adapted its policy on the VAT treatment of pension fund management conducted by insurers, removing an exemption for all services, other than those supplied to "special investment funds".
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Features
How will regulation need to change to be fit for the 21st century?
Pensions Expert 20th Anniversary: When the world’s first funded occupational pension plan appeared towards the end of the 16th century in the form of a large iron chest, its success was short-lived.
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News
Scottish charities face insolvency as exit debt bites
Community admission bodies in the Scottish Local Government Pension Scheme are in the middle of a debt crisis, accountants have said, but ceasing accrual or exiting the LGPS risks triggering unmanageable cessation debt and driving admitted bodies into insolvency.
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Opinion
Bin or bring in – which laws are needed and which have to go?
Pensions Expert 20th Anniversary: We asked five experts to nominate one law or regulation they would scrap, and another they would introduce. This is what they said.
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News
Government must clarify minimum pension age plans, say experts
HM Treasury has been urged to clarify its plans for increasing the age at which savers can access pension freedoms, after it accelerated the rate at which the state pension age will increase in July.
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News
Government reaffirms commitment to cold-calling ban
The government has announced that it will introduce its long-promised ban on pensions cold calling “when parliamentary time allows”, putting to bed concerns that a second consultation would further delay the legislation.
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Opinion
Should s67 be repealed?
Ian Neale from policy specialists Aries Insight looks at the recent debate around indexation, revaluation and section 67.
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News
Lady Judge: Employees want pensions in benefit package
Small and medium-sized employers who underestimate the value placed on pension benefits by employees are hindering their ability to attract and retain staff, former Pension Protection Fund chair Lady Barbara Judge has warned.
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News
Pensions slip down the agenda after election
If Theresa May’s Conservatives succeed in forming a lasting government, their immediate policy concerns regarding pensions are unlikely to change.
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News
MPs call for government to put brakes on 'free riding' gig economy firms
The Work and Pensions Committee has called for employee and self-employed national insurance contributions to be equalised, arguing that following the introduction of the new state pension, the self-employed contribute far less.
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News
DWP hopes contracted-out transfers will smooth BHS deal
The Department for Work and Pensions has published “urgent” regulations for struggling contracted-out schemes, in a bid to protect pensioners during deals such as the regulated apportionment arrangement of BHS.
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News
Election news sparks industry speculation
Prime Minister Theresa May’s announcement of a snap general election on June 8 this year has left pension commentators divided over the effect this might have on pensions policy.
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News
Labour's pension pledge card comes in for industry cost scrutiny
The Labour party has launched a pensioners’ pledge card, promising to extend the triple lock until 2025, compensate some of those affected by increases in women’s state pension age, and to protect the pensions of UK citizens overseas.
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