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OPDU Report 24
- May 2008
Bulletin Board
News from The Pensions Archive
The Pensions Archive Trust and the City of London-London
Metropolitan Archives celebrated the
establishment of the Pensions Archive at a reception in the
Guildhall Art Gallery sponsored by Merrill Lynch on 7 February.
Guests from the world of pensions and the City of London were
received by Stephen Quilter, Chairman of the Libraries, Archive and
Guildhall Art Gallery Committee of the City of London Corporation
and Alan Herbert, Chairman of The Pensions
Archive Trust. Phil Wynn Owen, Director General of Pensions at the
Department for Work and Pensions, standing in for
Mike O’Brien, Minister of State for Pensions Reform, was the guest speaker.
In his address of welcome Stephen Quilter said:
“I am delighted that London Metropolitan Archives has formed
a partnership with The Pensions Archive Trust. Here we are
able to harness our expertise as keepers of archives to an
organisation of professionals who are passionate and committed to
preserving the history of personal and occupational pensions in this
country. LMA and the Trust wish to do this not just because here is
information which should be preserved, but in order for it to be
used.
For the first time this information will be available in one
place with electronic catalogues on the internet. Researchers,
employers, pension fund trustees, trade unions, civil servants,
pension professionals, academics and students, journalists and
anyone who likes, will be welcome to come and use these collections.
It is also our intention to evangelise, to go and
tell people of all ages about the importance of having pensions, how
they should be started at an early age and how they should be
nurtured and protected. We will do this through our already active
education programme with schools and young people, linking into the
national curriculum where ever possible, but we will also explore
doing this in innovative and challenging new ways too.
Pension provision has changed our society profoundly over the last
150 years and undoubtedly for the greater good. History however
reminds us that it is a privilege we should respect, safeguard and
continually seek to improve. The launch of the partnership between
the City of London and the Pensions Archive Trust is I believe part
of the way we will preserve our history to enable us to improve the
future.”
In his speech Phil Wynn Owen said:
“I am delighted to be here to celebrate the partnership between the
Pensions Archive Trust and London Metropolitan Archives. First, may
I pass on the sincere apology of my Minister Mike O’Brien, who was
unable to be with us tonight but allied with his and the Department
for Work and Pensions congratulations on this event, charting the
continued growth of The Pensions Archive Trust.
The work of the Trust is a very important basis for furthering our
collective knowledge of pensions. And it is a testament to the
strength and ingenuity of the pensions industry that you have set up
and supported such a private pension archive.
As someone who was originally a historian, I believe passionately
that preserving and properly under-standing the past allows us to
learn useful lessons for the future. This is particularly important
with pensions because they are products with such long lives.
Decisions made today may not have consequences for another 40 years.
So it is important that they are well informed.
And that we learn lessons from the history of pensions – both
positive and negative, the highs and lows. So I welcome this partnership and the formation of a centre of
excellence for pensions history.
It will enable:
- the industry to build on its greatsuccess so far;
- your combined experience and expertise to expand the current collection; and
- many more people to share in a greater understanding of pensions through the outreach programmes.
Any study of pensions history will show how vital the pensions
industry is to the wealth and prosperity of our country. In the UK,
more so than in many other countries, private provision forms a significant part
of many individual’s pensions.
In 2005, the total value of pension funds in the UK was approaching
£1 trillion, about two thirds of GDP. The Government recognises the
great importance of this industry.
Ministers are determined to support and help create the
circumstances for the expansion of this existing provision. You will all know that
the pensions industry faces challenges. We have seen the shift away
from Defined Benefit schemes.
In 1967, there were about 8 million active members of private DB
schemes. In the late 1980s, this had fallen to around 5 million.
Today there are just over 3 million.
In part this has been offset by a rise in Defined Contribution
provision.
But in the face of vast increases in longevity and increasing costs,
some schemes have simply closed. The Government wants to encourage
good existing provision to stay open. It wants to send a clear
message to employers with good DB schemes, we want you to continue.
But there is no magic bullet solution.
So Ministers are currently taking through some significant measures
in Parliament to reduce burdens on current schemes. They offer the
prospect of significant savings for current schemes. And we will
continue to examine other measures to ease burdens on schemes, as
part of our rolling deregulatory review.
So where the Government can help existing schemes, it will seek
to do so. But it is not just the Government who can help. The
pensions industry is itself playing a role to develop new and
innovative methods of pension provision. We very much welcome this.
Innovation is crucial if we are to adapt to our changing society
It is important that you as the experts continue to drive market led
solutions that benefit all. But, of course, risks will always need
to be appropriately managed.
That is why we launched the Pensions Regulator and the Pension
Protection Fund.
They both do vital jobs in ensuring that any new business models are
fair to members and provide a safety net when things go wrong. All
while ensuring their actions are proportionate and responsible,
seeking to benefit the industry, not penalise it.
So we all seek to ensure that the relationship between the DWP, the
Pensions Regulator, the Pensions Protection Fund and the industry is
built on a shared understanding that private pensions are crucial to
the wealth of the nation.
They enable millions to save for a better retirement. And we all
want to see them go from strength to strength. For many, a private
pension already forms a solid bedrock of retirement income. But
despite the historic efforts of the industry and the Government,
there are still around 7 million people who are currently not saving
for retirement. Many are on low to middle incomes and do not have
access to good workplace pension provision.
The Government is determined to provide these people with a readily
available, cost effective way to save for retirement. So it is
currently taking action through a Pensions Reform Bill, currently
going through Parliament, to give such people the opportunity to
take responsibility and save for their retirement. This will see the
introduction of auto-enrolment for all employees, a mandatory
employer contribution and the creation of the Personal Accounts
Scheme.
Personal Accounts will be carefully aimed at the target market so
that they complement current provision.
By 2015 we expect to see:
- Up to 9 million people saving
more or saving for the first time; and
- Up to £10 billion more being saved in pensions (each year).
A massive transformation of the pensions landscape, growing the
market and providing many more opportunities for all concerned.
Crucially, these proposals have broad support from many, many
stake-holders including many in the industry, trade unions and
consumer groups. We are very grateful for the on-going support of
many people here today. And we look forward to continued close
working as we seek to get the details right in the coming months and
years.
It is perhaps fitting that this historic piece of legislation is
being debated in Parliament a century after the birth of the first
State pension in 1908. Albeit that Lloyd George’s Old Age Pension
Act of 1908 paid a means-tested pension of 5s a week
to those over 70 – at a time when average life expectancy was 52 for
women and 49 for men.
Someone once remarked: “Those who cannot remember the past are
condemned to repeat it”. A deeper engagement with and understanding
of the past will enable us to take the responsibility to better plan
for the future.
So we are delighted that the Pensions Archive Trust is joining up
with London Metropolitan Archives. It will enable you to
significantly expand on the important work you have undertaken so
far. I both welcome this and look forward to seeing the benefits of
your progress in coming years.”
In responding to Stephen Quilter’s and Phil Wynn Owen’s speeches
Alan Herbert paid tribute to Alastair Ross Goobey, the first
President of The Pensions Archive Trust who had sadly died five days
earlier. Speaking of Alastair’s support for the project he said:
“Alastair had taken a considerable interest in the idea of a
pensions archive from the outset and attended the inaugural meeting
of the Steering Group in January 2003 to discuss establishing an
archive
to record the history of the development of occupational and
personal pension provision in this country.
We were keen to record the part which his father, the late George
Ross Goobey, had played in developing the cult of equity investment
among pension funds in the 1950s when he was Manager of the Imperial
Tobacco Pension Fund.
Alastair travelled to his family home in Somerset and recovered from
the garage a number of his father’s key papers written fifty years
previously. At that time he was recommending to the Trustees of the
Imperial Fund that not only should they put new money into equities
but also sell gilts and other fixed interest stocks so that the Fund
would be eventually 100% invested in equities and property. His
mother kindly donated the papers to the Trust and they are now
safely lodged in the Pensions Archive and available for public
access. There are still other papers which Alastair was planning to
recover and I hope that the Pensions Archive will have the
opportunity to do this.
We were delighted and honoured when Alastair, despite his many other commitments, accepted our invitation to become the first
President of The Pensions Archive Trust on its formation in 2005.
Subsequently on 27 October 2005 he gave the inaugural Ross Goobey
Lecture at the Cass Business School and launched the appeal to raise
funds for the establishment and running of the Pensions Archive.
I was pleased to have had the opportunity that evening of placing on
record the considerable contribution that Alastair himself
had made in the pensions field.
When I was in contact with Alastair last month I reminded him that
we would like to place his papers
on pension issues in the Archive.
I hope we also will be successful in achieving this.
It is therefore very appropriate tonight that we have come together
to celebrate the launch of a partnership between London Metropolitan
Archives and The Pensions Archive Trust establishing the Pensions
Archive.”
A growing number of collections have been received into the Pensions
Archive and there are a number
in the pipeline. The National Association of Pension Funds has
donated its archives covering the period 1917-1998. The collection
gives a fascinating insight into the development of pension
provision in this country and the work of the NAPF. The collections
can be viewed at the London Metropolitan Archives but it is worth
making prior arrangements so that the relative documents can be
retrieved for viewing.
Katy Holman the Project Archivist who has played a key role since
last July in getting the collections set up within the Pensions
Archive regret-fully had to resign for family reasons in early
April. Her place has been taken on an interim basis by Richard
Wiltshire a senior archivist at the City of London - London Metro-politan
Archives until a new successor is appointed.
www.pensionsarchive.org.uk
The website is now up and running and shows some of the papers of
from the late George Ross Goobey’s collection in which he introduced
the cult of equity investment to the Imperial Tobacco Pension fund
in the 1950s and which was subsequently adopted by many other
pension schemes. The other of his papers listed on the website can
be viewed in the Pensions Archive.
The Pensions Archive Trust would like to hear from you if you if
your organisation is interested in sponsoring the work of the Trust,
donating materials, accessing material held in the collections or if
you wish to be kept informed of future developments. If you would
like to provide a history of your pension scheme this would be
welcomed.
All enquiries should be directed to the Project Archivist:
Richard Wiltshire
Interim Archivist -
Pensions Archive
020 7332 1862 (Mon-Thu)
020 7332 3879 (Fri only)
richard.wiltshire@cityoflondon.gov.uk
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