Public service pensions bill to save £65bn

Public Service Pensions Bill published today delivers final stage in halving cost of pensions

Related topics:  Retirement
Amy Loddington
13th September 2012
Retirement
The Public Service Pensions Bill 2013 will be published today, the final stage in delivering billions of pounds of savings from reforms. The Bill is forecast to save £65 billion over the next fifty years, a significant proportion of the total of more than £430 billion which the Government’s overall package of reforms to public service pensions is estimated to save.

Reforms will reduce public service pensions costs by around half, delivering sustainability for the long-term while ensuring that public service pensions remain amongst the very best available.

The Independent Public Service Pensions Commission published its final report in March 2011. The Government accepted its recommendations as the basis for consultation with public servants, trades unions and other member representatives and this Bill implements the agreements reached:

• moving to career average pension schemes, instead of unfair final salary schemes;

• asking public servants to work longer to receive a full pension, linking their Normal Pension Age to their State Pension Age, except for the Armed Forces, Police Officers and Firefighters;

• protecting those closest to retirement: those ten years from their Normal Pension Age on 1 April 2012 will not see any change in when they can retire, nor any decrease in the amount of pension they receive on retirement;

• setting an employer cost cap to ensure that public service pensions remain affordable and sustainable;

• creating a high barrier to changes to specific elements of these pension designs for 25 years – a settlement for a generation; and

• Setting a common legislative framework and improving governance arrangements of public service pension schemes.
The Bill will also close the generous and outdated Great Offices of State pensions for new office holders and move to a scheme equivalent to that available for ministers.

Chief Secretary to the Treasury, Danny Alexander, said:

"This Bill is the final stage in delivering sustainable public service pensions. It will cut the cost to taxpayers by nearly half, while ensuring that public sector workers, rightly, continue to receive pensions amongst the very best available.

“This is a good deal for taxpayers and a good deal for public service workers: a settlement for a generation.”

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