Most people have no clue how their pension and other savings are managed, or who by, and what the consequences for the economy, the planet or themselves of that management of their savings might be. Why is it that £6 trillion of pension fund money in the UK is totally unaccountable, and what would happen if we brought it back under saver control?
This is the audio version of this video:
This is the transcript:
Do you want to be divorced from your savings? Now, that's a slightly odd question because I don't think most people want to be divorced, and most people haven't thought about the fact that they might be divorced from their savings, but I think you probably are.
Most savings of most people in the UK are in pension funds and most pension funds are really remote from the people who actually hope to benefit from them one day.
That's true whether you put money into your own private pension scheme because you're self-employed or run your own company. And it's just as true if you are working for an employer who pays money into a fund for you.
Ask yourself a simple, straightforward question. Do you know what your pension fund is actually using the money that you've saved with them for, and I'm pretty sure that you will say ‘no'. - you have no idea what your pension fund is doing. And that's because pension funds aren't really obliged to tell you.
You can ask, in broad terms, where the fund has allocated its money.
If you've said that you want to hold the funds in cash, then you can be pretty confident that the fund has done that for you.
If you said you want to put all your money in the Japanese market, again, you could be pretty confident that the fund has done what it says it will do.
But in which company in the Japanese market will it currently hold the money? I don't think you'll be able to find out. And I don't think they need to tell you because the law doesn't require them to.
In fact, one of the absurdities of UK company law, but which is replicated in many other states, is that if you hold shares in a company, that company is required to account to you for what it has done with your funds. They must send you a set of accounts each year laid out in great detail, explaining how the company is doing.
If you put your money into a pension fund, which is a much more likely thing for you to do, you may get a very cursory little statement from the pension fund each year, saying, your fund improved by X per cent this year, or whatever. Your bonus is now whatever. And, just as likely, the value of your fund went down, because this has happened, of course, in recent years on occasions.
But there is no explanation. No background note, no justification. It's just a matter of this is what happened to you. “We, as your pension provider, have, as a consequence of the decisions we've made, improved your well-being, or not”, and there's nothing that you can normally do about it. And that is the most extraordinary situation.
Why is it that we require companies in which most people don't own shares to be heavily accountable, but we do not require that pension funds be accountable? And this situation is going to get worse. Let me give you an example as to why that will be the case. Rachel Reeves has announced that she is going to consolidate the 90 local authority pension schemes in the UK into eight megafunds.
Those megafunds will be for various areas of the UK rather than individual counties within the UK. The megafunds will be managed on behalf of the local authorities who will be members of those megafunds by megafund managers - the likes of Blackstone - and those fund managers will have no local knowledge of what is going on nor will they be accountable as such to local authorities where the employees who they are meant to represent are actually engaged.
Now, Rachel Raves says she's doing this because this will result in more money being invested in local communities in the UK. She has asked that in exchange for consolidating these funds, 5 per cent of their investments should be invested locally in this country. 5 per cent!
Look, the rate of tax subsidy for contributions into a pension fund is 20 percent at a minimum, and sometimes up to 45%, and the fund itself gets a subsidy by not being taxed on the investment return that it makes. The total cost of subsidies to pension funds in the UK is in excess of £70 billion a year, which is vastly more than we spend on defence and education and some other aspects of the economy, and You know, this is one of the biggest aspects of government spend, although it's not highlighted as such in the government's accounts.
And yet, there's no accountability for the use of that subsidy to those who are meant to benefit from it if you have a pension - either a pension you're hoping to get one day, or a pension that you're already enjoying.
Is that fair? Is that appropriate? Is that right? Why is your pension fund so divorced from you that there's no relationship between you and it, which is what I mean by divorced, because, as those who've been divorced might know, there's normally not much of a relationship left after that event. And nor is there when a pension fund is made this remote from the person paying into it.
I am genuinely worried about this, and I have been for years. I believe that we should be passing law that requires pension funds to prepare accounts to send to those who are dependent upon the fund managers so that they are accountable for what they are doing with the funds in which they put the money.
If you want to know where your money is, I think they should tell you.
If you want to know which companies they are invested in, I think you should know.
If you want to know how they generated a surplus or made a loss in the year, I think you have the right to find that answer out.
But at present, you don't.
And nor do you in particular know whether any of that money was used to generate new job opportunities and new investment in the UK economy.
And you also don't know whether, for example, that fund was used to create climate harm or climate benefit. And again, that might matter to you a great deal.
I believe that we should have pension funds where that transparency exists. I believe it is the government's job to provide such pension funds through National Savings and Investments, so that people can get the accountability that they want for their savings.
I also believe that the government has a duty to demand this from private-sector pension providers. But they are up against the likes of Blackstone, the biggest investment fund manager in the world, and all the others who are equivalent. And those companies are enormous in their financial power because your money is entrusted to them and they have no accountability to you for it.
All their power comes from you, but they don't give a damn about you. Let me be blunt: they really don't. In fact, very often, they will be arguing for outcomes inside the economy that are frankly contrary to your well-being but which are great for fund managers.
This divorce of savings from the person who actually owns the benefit of those savings is of staggering importance inside our economy. If we recreated the relationship between savings and the institution that was responsible for managing those savings we could transform the way in which our economy was run.
The government could have the funds it needs for a Green New Deal, because a lot of people would choose to save in that way if only they were given the option.
The money to invest in the long-term future of the young people of this country could be found, because many people of my age would want such investment to take place through their pension fund to ensure that their children, their grandchildren, or their nieces, nephews, and whoever else got the benefit which required from new employment opportunities.
And we could, for example, have the funding that we need for flood defences, and social housing, and other things that are fundamental to our communities, if only people were given the choice as to how the funds in their pension arrangements were to be invested to provide for the security of the communities in which they live.
But none of that is possible, because that is not what fund managers want to do. They want to play speculation instead.
I believe pension funds are atrociously managed in this country. I think that your savings are atrociously managed. And I'm worried that there's almost nothing you can do about it. And I believe that a decent government would make changes to our pension arrangements to make pension funds accountable to their members for exactly what they do. But at the moment, that's the last thing they are. And this has to change.
Thanks for reading this post.
You can share this post on social media of your choice by clicking these icons:
There are links to this blog's glossary in the above post that explain technical terms used in it. Follow them for more explanations.
You can subscribe to this blog's daily email here.
And if you would like to support this blog you can, here:
I would like to know how much of savings (the proportion or percentage) is taken out in profits and fees; since corporatism took over from muutal fund pension savings? And over a twenty year period, what returns on investment they have offered?
I do not have the data
In my comment, I should have said profits, fees, expense, bonuses (because the corporates always have an angle); oh, and you can deduct £30Bn from the corporate pension funds recent performance, for the LDI fiasco, that had to be bailed out by the Treasury and BoE during Truss’s farcical premiership. Pensions? I am still waiting for a rational justification of pension funds anywhere near LDIs. You need eyes in the back of your head.
The annual accounts of the 11 Scottish local authority funds are published every year and are openly available on their websites. That’s how I know they invest very little in Scotland. However it is probably only oddballs like me who ever look at them. They take a lot of effort to read and I only do it selectively to find particular pieces of information. Currently the 11 funds have £75bn in assets and all are in surplus….so the employers are taking a pension contributions holiday for a couple of years so they can allocate money to other purposes during the ongoing financial squeeze on local authority finances.
Bit what is you were in a private company pension fund?
I’m in LGPS and I get an annual report on where the money is
I look at it rather blankly BUT it seems to go to the right sort of places.
I might add my ‘fund’ has the investments from about 10 different County schemes so it is already a ‘Superfund’
One model for the UK to consider is Australia’s portfolio holdings disclosure regime https://treasury.gov.au/consultation/c2021-200177
Agreed
It was said during the peak of mergers and acquisitions mania that someone’s pension fund could actively working to put the pension fund holder out of a job. That is still true, and the way that fund managers lend or lease shares to help short selling and still,I believe, are able to keep some of the fee, while helping reduce the value of the fund all show, one way,how the system is currently failing.
Also many defined contribution funds are effectively managed tracker funds, they follow the market index but charge the higher managed fund fee. The best performing funds are also never available to the ordinary pension fund holder.
Many years ago pension funds, mostly defined benefits types put money in guilts and other fixed return investments, and overall performed as well or better than equity investments. The main difference on modern funds is the fund managers and companies make more money for themselves giving pensioners less.
I am not at all sure all those claims are true
A few year’s back, an enterprising union member at my workplace put in freedom of information (FOI) act request about the state of our local authority (LA) pension scheme which is managed by the county council.
The FOI revealed that under a Labour council, the city council pension scheme that I am a part of (and pay in a contribution myself – quite a chunk I might say, and worth it of course) – that during their term in office they took the employer’s contribution holiday offered by the Tory government.
This had contributed to a huge black hole in the fund. Eventually this became common knowledge and my LA as far as I know has been working to fill the hole (or hasn’t it?).
But going forward and looking at Reeves plans involving the City, her proposals take on a whole new perspective – what state are all these local government pension schemes actually in? What excuses will the city slickers have when they’ve taken their fees and they either don’t deliver or under-deliver? What are the politicians hiding?
The more you think about it, the more it becomes clear that since Thatcher at least, mass theft of ordinary people’s wealth has become a way of life in this country through the financial system and our politicians – national and local – are all in on it.
Sobering isn’t it?
It certainly focuses one’s mind on the alternatives…………….
I’ve just been trying to do some back of envelope calculations for the England and Wales Local Authority Pension Schemes. The government do publish some statistics for the individual funds, which include administrative expenditure and total income but not the value of their investments, which globally is reported as £391.5bn. The Tables list 85 LA funds plus two EA fund which I’ve not included.
Firstly on average admin expenses are 0.54% of income. Which seems OK. Note I not sure this includes investment management expenses.
However there is a big difference between the largest funds (top 10, 0.12%) and the smallest (bottom 10, 2.51%). So I think there is a case for some consolidation of funds, probably on a regional basis to reduce admin costs.
The largest 8 funds are the Welsh UA ones, which if we were to assume income is proportional to investment vary in size from £33bn down to £10bn. I can see no logical to change these as administrative units, with trustees, that could be responsible for managing their investments.
For the others I can see a case to consolidate then into a set of >£10bn funds.
This could require about another 20 English funds of about £13bn each.
Pensions funds need to be responsible to their members. They then have to decide investment strategies, which in general with be diversified. That will likely require that they employ investment managers from the City, possible different ones for different asset classes, and they need to hold them responsible for performance and replace them if necessary.
If would still be possible for the government to impose some overall guidance (such as 25% to be invested in UK infrastructure), but as these are defined benefit not defined contribution schemes equally the government would need to guarantee them.
My own situation is that one of my pensions is in the British Coal Staff Superannuation Scheme (BCSSS). This is a closed scheme so that it works like a collective draw down pension. Its asset value is now about £8.9bn, but of course falling. It has a government guarantee, so is able to take on a bit more risk than a scheme that doesn’t. There are fund Report and Accounts. There is a responsible Investment Strategy. Some of the trustees are elected by the members. It does have 4 principle investment managers (including Blackrock). Admin expenses are 1.3% of income, Investment admin expenses are 6.8% of income.
“Firstly on average admin expenses are 0.54% of income. Which seems OK”.
OK? Given that the top eight you analysed were £33Bn to £10Bn, this percentage of fund analysis does not actually tell us much (a very small percentage of a very big number – tells us what exactly?). This is like Debt/GDP, it obscures as much as it explains. The quantum informs more precisely; it is probably eye-watering, and then you have to figure out – is that value for money; when the first principle is security of the fund, and a lot of gilts are being bought.
How much is spent on marketing? What bonuses are paid, and to whom? Quantum, quantum.
Richard,
I am currently reading The Deficit Myth.
Stephanie Kelton makes the point that the ‘endowment/taxes’ hypothecated for Medicare/Aid & Social Security in the USA are a major part of the problem those systems face.
Why do we need ‘pension funds’ when the Government can create money to pay them?
Looking at it from a MMT perspective Pension Contributions are really just another tax, the difference being that they also give the payee an entitlement to a pension.
My suggestion might be that we have a better state pension along with an ‘earnings related’ element so everyone gets a better pension and other Social Security benefits.
BUT what about using the proceeds of ‘Pension Tax’ to create a series of ‘Wealth Funds’ One I suggest investing in ‘commercial’ assets that create a return eg renewable energy, telecoms and commercial property. Another would own ‘non profit making’ assets eg Social Housing, farms, ‘public buildings’ eg hospitals, schools etc
I agree we could have much better state pension funds but they must turn savings into capital – and nothing about MMT denies that is a useful activity IMO
People involved in campaigning for divestment in LGPS know from bitter experience that the influence of members and councillors is very slight. My sceme took 30 years to divest from tobacco, and current campaign to divest from fossil fuels is only now showing slow signs of success despite all 5 local authority members having declared a climate emergency. Having said that, democratic accountability needs to be retained, and I fear the 8 mega pools will be even less accountable.