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Guernsey Public Sector Pension Scheme proposals

Guernsey Public Sector Pension Scheme proposals. Purpose. To explain the basis of current pension arrangements and terminology To outline the Guernsey States proposals for public sector pensions To compare / contrast with UK developments To take and answer questions on the proposals

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Guernsey Public Sector Pension Scheme proposals

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  1. Guernsey Public Sector Pension Scheme proposals

  2. Purpose • To explain the basis of current pension arrangements and terminology • To outline the Guernsey States proposals for public sector pensions • To compare / contrast with UK developments • To take and answer questions on the proposals • Provide an opportunity for members to take a view on the acceptability, or not of the proposals.

  3. Pension terminology (1) • State Pension Age (SPA) the age at which someone can get their ‘state pension’ • Normal Pension Age (NPA) the age at which you can access an unreduced pension from your occupational pension scheme • Minimum Pension Age (MPA) the age at which you can access a pension

  4. Pension terminology (2) • Defined Benefit schemes (DB) – such as ‘final salary’ and CARE. Pension benefits are defined by the rules of the scheme and must be paid irrespective of the position of the pension fund. • Final Salary - pension is calculated on either the last year of earnings or over a few years prior to retirement. • CARE– each year of pension contributions (and not solely the final year(s))is calculated for pension purposes. UK public sector schemes moving to CARE. • Defined Contribution (DC) or ‘money purchase’. Pension is dependent upon growth of a ‘pension pot’ . Pension pot is based on contributions from employer and employee – return is not guaranteed

  5. Pension terminology (3) • ‘Accrual’ – the rate that a pension builds up at, so 1/80th = 1/80th of pensionable pay for each year of pensionable service; • Example - £30,000 / 80 x 20 years = £375x20 years = pension of £7,500 • ‘Funded schemes’ – ‘unfunded schemes’ –’pay as you go’ – How schemes are funded. Guernsey is a ‘funded scheme’ with real assets and liabilities. NHS is ‘unfunded’ – no ‘pension pot’ but accounted for as if real. Pensions paid out of revenue.

  6. Current arrangements (Nurses) • Pre-2008 • NPA60 (some members with NPA 55) • 1/80th • Final salary plus lump sum • 6.5% employee • 14.1% employer • 45 yrs max • RPI • Post 2008 • NPA65 • 1/60th • Final salary no lump sum • 6.5% employee • 14.1% employer • 45 yrs max • RPIX

  7. ‘The politics’ • UK Hutton Report –’ work longer , pay more get less’; close final salary introduce care, increase retirement age and pay more in pension contributions. • Government (UK) should set a cap on the costs that they are prepared to incur • Employers moving from final salary; see UK Public and private sector, Jersey etc • Not just an ‘affordability issue’ – it’s also about ‘exposure to risk’ in the longer term • Public sector v private sector provision on Guernsey • ‘People living longer so receiving pension for longer’ – ‘work longer to deliver pension for longer in retirement’ • Not just about if a ‘case for change has been made’ – TUs did not accept the case for change in the UK • Guernsey – States do not want to continue to build up ‘final salary’ liabilities • Guernsey politics? States meeting Feb 2014

  8. Guernsey process • Original discussions 2012 - outcome not accepted by trade unions (ASEO) • Further discussions 2013 and new proposals tabled – resulting in; • Delayed implementation to Jan 2015 • Increased protection from 5-10yrs • Reduction in proposed employee contribution from 8% to 7.5% • Phased increase in reduced contributions; 7% then 7.5% • Guaranteed ‘floor’ on employer contribution • Change to proposed pension increase cap in retirement from 5% to 6% with possibility of further review if over 7.5%

  9. Proposals in summary • New scheme from Jan 2015 • Close ‘final salary’ and introduce CARE in Jan 2015 for ‘future pension benefits’ • Normal pension age (now 60/65) in CARE to equal state pension age – rising to 67 by 2031 • Accrual 1/80th and 3/80th ‘lump sum’ • Compulsory for new and part time staff • Employee Contribution to rise to 7.5% by Jan 2016 • Pension increases in service and in retirement at RPIX capped at 6% but with review • Additional pension benefits can be purchased in DC arrangement • Employer contribution rate 12% (max 14%) from14.1% • No maximum service

  10. ‘Protections’ and interim arrangements • Start date put back from 2014 to 2015 • Members within ten years of their normal pension age as at 31/12/13 (increased from original 5 years) will have their normal pension age (55, 60 or 65) protected • Final salary benefits earned to Jan 2015 will be based on final salary at retirement and not as at 2015. • Phased increase in contributions: 7% from Jan 2015 and 7.5% from Jan 2016

  11. The UK NHS • Public sector final salary schemes closing and CARE being introduced. Public Sector Pension Act does not allow final salary schemes to be negotiated in future. • Protection is on both retirement age and scheme membership : full protection and tiered protection • Retirement in CARE to equal state pension age • Contributions increased in 2008 to an average of 9.8% - average nurse will pay about 9.3% - could rise further • Employer contribution 14% • Increases in retirement capped at CPI (was RPI) • NHS CARE accrual 1/54th but no lump sum • Working Longer Review • Introduction of cost / risk sharing arrangements

  12. How it will work…. • For consideration by States in February and if passed as proposed.. • Someone retiring before Jan 2015 no change • After Jan 2015 all future service will be at CARE • All service to 2015 protected on a final salary basis and final salary link remains for this service • Those within 10 years of NPA in Dec 2013 will retain their pension age so can retire at that point or later without a reduction in benefits.

  13. Finally… • RCN view is that the proposals are ‘the best that can be achieved through negotiation’ • Rejection means serious consideration of industrial action – what are members prepared to do about it? • Members are asked to give a view in RCN ballot

  14. Discussion / feedback • Views • Strength of member feeling • Acceptability or not • If rejection – what next?

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