UK set to create new pension megafunds with aim of unlocking $100
billion for investment
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[November 14, 2024] By
PAN PYLAS
LONDON (AP) — British Treasury chief Rachel Reeves is set to announce
plans later Thursday to merge dozens of pension funds with the aim of
unlocking tens of billions of pounds for investment and boosting the
U.K.'s sub-par economic growth.
In comments released by the Treasury ahead of her speech to finance
leaders in central London, Reeves will say that the creation of
so-called “megafunds” will represent the “biggest pension reform in
decades.”
In her first so-called Mansion House speech, an annual ritual for
British chancellors of the exchequer, Reeves will say that the changes
could help unlock 80 billion pounds ($100 billion) for investment.
Pension funds invest in a variety of assets, such as shares, bonds, real
estate and infrastructure, in an attempt to increase the retirement
benefits for their members.
The proposed merger of 86 local authority pension funds in England and
Wales has echoes with schemes undertaken in Australia and Canada, where
pension funds are widely seen to have taken advantage of their bigger
size to invest in assets and boost growth. By 2030, the new Local
Government Pension Scheme in England and Wales is set to manage assets
worth around 500 billion pounds by 2030.
The new Labour government will introduce the reforms through a new bill
in parliament next year. Early indications suggest that it has broad
support across the political divide — the former Conservative government
had indicated it would go down this route too — and within the pensions
industry.
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Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer and Chancellor Rachel Reeves
speak with members of staff, during a visit to University Hospital
Coventry and Warwickshire, in Coventry, England, Thursday, Oct. 31,
2024. (AP Photo/Darren Staples, pool)
“Larger pension schemes can help
achieve better outcomes for savers through economies of scale,
stronger governance, negotiating power and additional resources,"
said Zoe Alexander, director of policy and advocacy at the Pensions
and Lifetime Savings Association, an organization that seeks to
bring the industry together and promote best practice.
Business leaders cautiously welcomed the reform plan but said the
government needs to work hard to win their support following
Reeves's tax-raising budget last month.
“With the budget piling additional costs on firms and squeezing
their headroom to invest, the government needs to work hard to
regain the confidence in the U.K. as a place businesses and
communities can succeed," said Confederation of British Industry
chief economist Louise Hellem.
“Pension schemes will want to operate within a U.K. economy that is
prospering," she added.
Since the global financial crisis in 2008-9, the British economy has
underperformed relative to previous years. The government's main aim
is to bolster growth. Figures Friday are predicted to show that the
economy barely grew in the second quarter of the year.
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