All Law & regulation articles – Page 70
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NewsCalls for NHS pension reform to tackle 'medical staffing crisis'
On the go: The British Medical Association has used a Public Accounts Committee report criticising the Treasury’s implementation of public sector pension reforms to call for further changes to the NHS Pension Scheme in order to tackle the medical staffing crisis.
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PodcastsPodcast: Trustees should focus more on scheme admin in anti-scam fight
Podcast: The Pensions Ombudsman has declared schemes should have their transfer and due diligence procedures updated within a month of new anti-scams guidance. Compliance will require a huge amount of administrative time and resources, and trustees should give scheme administration more focus. LCP partner Francesca Bailey and Pensions Management Institute president Lesley Alexander talk scams, dashboards and corporate activity.
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NewsACA calls for more time to comply with pension scams rules
On the go: The Association of Consulting Actuaries has said administrators and trustees will need more time to comply with new pension scam rules being introduced by the government.
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NewsPreliminary findings show govt failings on state pension age changes
On the go: Women born in the 1950s suffered delays of more than two years in being informed about rises in their state pension age due to government maladministration, according to preliminary findings by the Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman.
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NewsIndustry bodies warn of 'consultation fatigue'
A number of industry bodies are concerned about “fatigue” from a deluge of consultations, Pensions Expert can reveal, warning that the sheer number of responses required, coupled with the short time-frames in which to prepare them, risks overwhelming their ability to respond properly.
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NewsDWP presses ahead with TCFD rules in time for COP 26
The Department for Work and Pensions is to press ahead with new rules that will require trustees to report on their schemes’ climate change investment risks by October, but has introduced a number of changes and easements to the regulations after industry concerns.
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NewsOnly half of trustee boards conduct governance reviews
On the go: Only half of defined benefit scheme trustee boards review their effectiveness annually, which shows the industry still has some way to go when it comes to governance, according to Willis Towers Watson.
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NewsHigh Court spares council £6.5m in LGPS exit credit ruling
The High Court has found in favour of a county council in a battle with a contractor over £6.5m in exit credits, a ruling legal experts say provides much-needed clarity over regulations that have given rise to several legal disputes.
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NewsFCA announces expectations for publication of costs and charges data this summer
On the go: The Financial Conduct Authority has announced it will allow pension providers to disclose their charges at a scheme level rather than employer level for this year when data are published under new rules this summer.
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NewsAon sells US businesses to complete merger with WTW
On the go: Aon has sold two US businesses in order to complete its merger with Willis Towers Watson, after concerns were raised by the US Department of Justice.
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Muslims missing out on pensions worth £13bn due to sharia concerns
One-third of Muslims in the UK do not have a pension due to the lack of sharia-compliant pension options, missing out on an estimated £12.8bn in savings for retirement, which has prompted calls for trustees to introduce Islamic funds in defined contribution schemes.
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NewsGovt fixes NHS scheme rules to avoid hefty retirement bills
The government is to amend regulations to the NHS Pension Scheme that has seen hundreds of employers, including GPs, hit with charges for staff members who are in the last three years prior to retirement, which could amount to hundreds of thousands of pounds.
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NewsTPR: Trustees must ‘improve their understanding’ of liquidity risks
On the go: Trustees need to improve their understanding of liquidity risks and do more to monitor and mitigate against them, the Pensions Regulator has said.
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NewsMaster trusts to pave the way for dashboards integration in 2023
Master trusts and pension providers regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority will be the first schemes to provide data for the pensions dashboards in 2023, according to a new call for input published on Thursday.
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NewsTPR looks to clarify new contribution notice tests
On the go: The Pensions Regulator has called for the pensions industry to give its views on the application of new contribution notice tests stemming from the Pension Schemes Act.
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PodcastsPodcast: Police officers let down by poor McCloud communication
Podcast: Police officers, who have complained about the ramifications of the government’s McCloud remedy, face a difficult battle to get their plight rectified, in another case where inadequate policy and communications has created damaging uncertainty for members. Quietroom development lead Joe Craig and Taylor Wessing senior associate Hadassah Shulman discuss this case, as well as simpler annual statements and the government’s anti-scam proposals.
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NewsTPR urges trustees to remain vigilant of sponsor activity
The Pensions Regulator has used its latest annual funding statement to call for trustees to remain vigilant of weakening employer covenants and corporate activity, while laying out guidance on how to approach scheme valuations under the current challenging conditions brought by the pandemic.
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NewsBMA calls for doctors to be exempt from pension age hike
On the go: The British Medical Association has called for NHS workers to be exempt from proposals to increase the minimum pension age to 57, saying the complex nature of pensions taxation means many need to retire before this age.
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NewsOmbudsman gives providers a month to update transfer processes
The Pensions Ombudsman expects pension providers to update their transfer processes, due diligence checks and member communications within one month of the new scams regulatory guidance being issued.
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NewsDWP DC single charging structure to bring headaches for master trusts
The Department for Work and Pensions is considering introducing a universal charging structure for the default funds in defined contribution schemes. The move was welcomed for the clarity it might give to DC savers, but experts have warned of the problems it would cause master trusts like Nest.







