Pensions Act 2004

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The Pensions Act 2004 is an Act of Parliament of the Parliament of the United Kingdom to improve the running of pension schemes.

In the years following the introduction of the Pensions Act 1995, it was widely perceived that it was failing to offer the protection to pension scheme members that had been anticipated. The Occupational Pensions Regulatory Authority was perceived as being reactive, didactic and uncommercial. The Minimum funding requirement had not prevented some pension schemes winding up with insufficient assets to secure their liabilities, amid considerable publicity. There was strong political pressure to establish a guarantee fund similar to the American Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation. Much of the regulation was perceived to be unnecessarily restrictive. The end result was the Pensions Act 2004.

The main features of the Act include:

  • The abolition of the Occupational Pensions Regulatory Authority and its replacement by the Pensions Regulator, with wider powers to intervene of its own volition;
  • New powers for the Pensions Regulator to intervene where employers, directors and majority shareholders were perceived to be avoiding their responsibilities to pension schemes and where employers were insufficiently resourced to support the pension scheme;
  • New notification requirements;
  • The establishment of the Pension Protection Fund to provide benefits for pension scheme members where a pension scheme had gone into winding-up with insufficient resources to fund scheme benefits and no employer to make good the underfunding;
  • The abolition of the minimum funding requirement and its replacement with scheme-specific funding requirements;
  • Modification of the protections for existing pension scheme benefits and of the requirements for pension schemes to have member nominated trustees.

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