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Attractive pensions benefits are possible without huge price聽hikes

Action is clearly needed to shore up the USS, but the trustee needs to be more flexible, says Alistair Jarvis

Published on
April 20, 2021
Last updated
April 20, 2021
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In recent years, the cost of providing pensions in the UK has risen because people are living longer, long-term interest rates are low, and there is a weak outlook for investments in the future.

The Universities Superannuation Scheme (USS) is not immune to these pressures, and, last month, the USS trustee, which runs the scheme, set very high prices to聽maintain the status quo on聽benefits.

The uncomfortable truth is that action needs to be taken. However, these levels of contributions 鈥 up to 56聽per cent of salary 鈥 would be unaffordable for employers and members. Moreover, a difference of opinion exists between employers and the USS trustee over the scale of the problem.

That is why Universities聽UK (UUK) is consulting 340 employers over alternative proposals. Employers are not arguing that the scheme鈥檚 status quo can be maintained. However, we are urging the USS trustee to consider a聽revised approach and assumptions that bring down the headline costs and reduce the scale of reform needed, ensuring that any changes are proportionate and justified.

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Proposals in our consultation, which runs until 24聽May, indicate how we could preserve a聽significant element of聽defined benefits in the scheme, thereby continuing to offer a聽valuable pension to staff in the聽future.

The deficit was highlighted by 2018鈥檚 first report by the Joint Expert Panel (JEP), set up jointly by UUK and the University and College Union (UCU). We that believe applying the same approach used by the JEP to this valuation would result in a fair outcome 鈥 which would still require a聽level of聽reform to聽maintain the combined employer and member rate of 30.7聽per cent at聽present.

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If there is no agreement, the USS trustee will implement higher contribution rates for employers and members in October (34.7聽per cent of salary 鈥 split 23.7聽per cent for employers and 11聽per cent for members), agreed as part of the last valuation. Ultimately, it could impose even higher levels of contributions, which it sets out in its recent update report.

It is easy to simply oppose change, but reform is necessary to tackle the scheme鈥檚 funding gap and to ensure that USS pensions are affordable for members and employers alike.

Through our consultation, we are asking employers to seek views of their staff on the way forward. Our alternative proposal aligns with the outcome we believe that the JEP would arrive聽at. It envisages the continuation of the current contribution levels for members and employers and significantly less drastic benefit reform than the USS trustee is proposing in its three outlined scenarios.

It depends on even stronger financial underpinning of the scheme from employers (known as covenant support). Importantly, it also requires the USS trustee to move its assumptions and value on covenant to a聽fairer position.

The consultation also asks for employers鈥 feedback on the suggestion to more fully explore a聽move to a聽conditional indexation model, whereby members would receive a guaranteed core level of benefits but future increases would be dependent on investment returns. This has the potential to be an attractive and sustainable option. Employers are very willing to consider feasible and affordable alternatives from the UCU on tackling the scheme鈥檚 financial challenges and designing the benefits package to best suit the needs of all eligible employees.

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This valuation provides a vital opportunity to address one of the major problems with the聽USS. We want to find a聽way to make the scheme affordable for the 20聽per cent of staff who currently opt聽out of聽joining the scheme, many of whom are priced聽out. The consultation proposes a聽flexible payment option, whereby members can pay a lower contribution rate while still benefiting from money from employers pay into their pension.

We continue to take every opportunity to convince the USS trustee that it can allow more leeway, which would limit the extent of the changes needed.

The commitment of employers to their staff and to the scheme is clear from their investment in USS pensions. There has been a 50聽per cent increase in the level of employer contributions as a percentage of salary to the USS over the past decade (an聽extra 拢623聽million per聽year), pushing staffing costs up to 59聽per cent of the higher education sector鈥檚 budget 鈥 the total staff spend is 44聽per cent higher than it was six聽years ago. Furthermore, the USS values employers鈥 additional covenant support at 14聽per cent of payroll, the equivalent of 拢1.25聽billion a聽year.

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The very high pricing proposed by the USS trustee comes despite the recent changes made to the valuation process, agreed through joint working by the UCU, UUK and the USS, and informed by recommendations in the second JEP report, published at the end of聽2019.

This has seen the removal of the controversial 鈥淭est聽1鈥 valuation methodology, which the union campaigned to聽change, and the development of shared valuation principles and a聽scheme purpose. Yet employers remain concerned that aspects of the scheme governance are unhelpful and feel that their opinions are聽not properly considered in the valuation process. Therefore, as part of our consultation, we are seeking employer views on whether a formal review of the scheme鈥檚 governance should take place.

Over the coming weeks, UUK wants to work with employers, the UCU, members of university staff and those running the USS to ensure that USS pensions remain valuable and are affordable for聽all.

Alistair Jarvis is chief executive of Universities聽UK, which represents 340 USS employers. Its closes on 24聽May.

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