Certification of Pension Schemes and Effects on Members' State Scheme Rights and Duties
Requirements for certification of occupational pension schemes providing guaranteed minimum pensions
Requirements for certification of occupational and personal money purchase schemes
Cancellation, variation, surrender and refusal of certificates
Termination of Contracted-out or Appropriate Scheme Status: State Scheme Premiums
Approval of arrangements for schemes ceasing to be certified
51. Payment of state scheme premiums on termination of certified status.
55. Alternative basis for revaluation of earnings factors for calculation of certain premiums.
57. Deduction of contributions equivalent premium from refund of scheme contributions.
59. Further provisions concerning calculations relating to premiums.
60. Actuarial tables for purposes of calculations relating to premiums.
61. Inclusion of former and future earners for some purposes of this Chapter.
Revaluation of Accrued Benefits (Excluding Guaranteed Minimum Pensions)
Protection of Increases in Guaranteed Minimum Pensions (“Anti-franking”)
Annual Increases of Pensions in Payment
Pensions under Final Salary Schemes, etc.
98. Scope of Chapter I: annual increase of certain occupational pensions.
100. Annual increase of earlier service component where scheme is in surplus.
101. Proportional increase where first period is less than 12 months.
103. Application of Chapter I to pensions not attributable to pensionable service.
115. Requirement for independent trustee where employer becomes insolvent, etc.
116. Members' powers to apply to court to enforce duty under s. 115.
117. Further provisions as to appointment and powers of independent trustees.
118. Duty of insolvency practitioner or official receiver to give information to scheme trustees.
General and Miscellaneous Provisions
Avoidance of certain transactions and provisions
155. Inalienability of guaranteed minimum pension and protected rights payments.
156. Terms of contracts of service or schemes restricting choice to be void.
157. Provisions excluding Chapter II of Part VII to be void.
158. Removal of restrictions on friendly societies' pension business.
159. Exemption of certain schemes from rule against perpetuities.
Application of provisions relating to social security administration
An Act to consolidate for Northern Ireland certain enactments relating to pension schemes, with corrections and minor improvements under the Consolidation of Enactments (Procedure) Act 1949.
[5th November 1993]
Be it enacted by the Queen’s most Excellent Majesty, by and with the advice and consent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal, and Commons, in this present Parliament assembled, and by the authority of the same, as follows:—
In this Act—
“occupational pension scheme” means any scheme or arrangement which is comprised in one or more instruments or agreements and which has, or is capable of having, effect in relation to one or more descriptions or categories of employments so as to provide benefits, in the form of pensions or otherwise, payable on termination of service, or on death or retirement, to or in respect of earners with qualifying service in an employment of any such description or category;
“personal pension scheme” means any scheme or arrangement which is comprised in one or more instruments or agreements and which has, or is capable of having, effect so as to provide benefits, in the form of pensions or otherwise, payable on death or retirement to or in respect of employed earners who have made arrangements with the trustees or managers of the scheme for them to become members of it;
“public service pension scheme” means an occupational pension scheme established by or under an enactment or the Royal prerogative or a Royal charter, being a scheme—
all the particulars of which are set out in, or in a legislative instrument made under, an enactment, Royal warrant or charter, or
which cannot come into force, or be amended, without the scheme or amendment being approved by a Minister of the Crown or government department,
and includes any occupational pension scheme established, with the concurrence of the Department of Finance and Personnel, by or with the approval of another government department and any occupational pension scheme prescribed by regulations made by the Department and the Department of Finance and Personnel jointly as being a scheme which ought in their opinion to be treated as a public service pension scheme for the purposes of this Act.
(1) Regulations may make provision with respect to the staff and other facilities that are to be available to the Registrar.
(2) Regulations may require—
(a) any person who is or has been—
(i) a trustee or manager of an occupational or personal pension scheme or an administrator of a public service pension scheme, or
(ii) the employer in relation to employment of any description or category to which an occupational pension scheme relates, and
(b) such other persons as may be prescribed,
to provide the Registrar with such information for the purposes of the register in such form and within such time as may be prescribed.
(3) The Department may direct the Registrar to submit to it, in such form and at such intervals as may be specified in the direction, such statistical and other reports as the Department may require; and the Department may determine at its discretion whether or not to publish a report submitted to it under this subsection.
(4) In this section—
“the register” means the register of occupational and personal pension schemes compiled and maintained under section 6 of the [1993 c. 48.] Pension Schemes Act 1993;
“the Registrar” means the Registrar of Occupational and Personal Pension Schemes appointed under that section.
(1) Regulations shall provide for the Board to issue certificates stating—
(a) that the employment of an earner in employed earner’s employment is contracted-out employment by reference to an occupational pension scheme; or
(b) that a personal pension scheme is an appropriate scheme;
and in this Act a certificate under paragraph (a) is referred to as “a contracting-out certificate” and a certificate under paragraph (b) as “an appropriate scheme certificate”.
(2) The regulations shall provide for contracting-out certificates to be issued to employers and to specify—
(a) the employments which are to be treated, either generally or in relation to any specified description of earners, as contracted-out employments; and
(b) the occupational pension schemes by reference to which those employments are to be so treated.
(3) An occupational pension scheme is a contracted-out scheme in relation to an earner’s employment if it is for the time being specified in a contracting-out certificate in relation to that employment; and references in this Act to the contracting-out of a scheme are references to its inclusion in such a certificate.
(4) A personal pension scheme is an appropriate scheme if there is in force an appropriate scheme certificate issued by the Board in accordance with this Chapter that it is such a scheme.
(5) An appropriate scheme certificate for the time being in force in relation to a scheme shall be conclusive that the scheme is an appropriate scheme.
(6) Regulations shall provide that any question whether a personal pension scheme is or at any time was an appropriate scheme shall be determined by the Board.
(7) Except in prescribed circumstances, no contracting-out certificate or appropriate scheme certificate shall have effect from a date earlier than that on which the certificate is issued.
(1) The employment of an earner in employed earner’s employment is “contracted-out employment” in relation to him during any period in which he is under pensionable age and—
(a) either—
(i) his service in the employment is for the time being service which qualifies him for a guaranteed minimum pension provided by an occupational pension scheme, or
(ii) his employer makes minimum payments in respect of his employment to an occupational pension scheme which is contracted-out by virtue of satisfying section 5(3) (in this Act referred to as “a money purchase contracted-out scheme”); and
(b) there is in force a contracting-out certificate issued by the Board in accordance with this Chapter stating that the employment is contracted-out employment by reference to the scheme.
(2) In this Act—
“guaranteed minimum pension” means any pension which is provided by an occupational pension scheme in accordance with the requirements of sections 9 and 13 to the extent to which its weekly rate is equal to the earner’s or, as the case may be, the earner’s widow’s or widower’s guaranteed minimum as determined for the purposes of those sections respectively; and
“minimum payment”, in relation to an earner’s employment in any tax week, means the rebate percentage of so much of the earnings paid to or for the benefit of the earner in that week as exceeds the current lower earnings limit but not the current upper earnings limit (or the prescribed equivalents if he is paid otherwise than weekly);
and for the purposes of this subsection “rebate percentage” means the sum of the percentages for the time being mentioned in paragraphs (a) and (b) of section 37(1).
(3) Regulations may make provision—
(a) for the manner in which, and time at which or period within which, minimum payments are to be made;
(b) for the recovery by employers of amounts in respect of the whole or part of minimum payments by deduction from earnings;
(c) for calculating the amounts payable according to a scale prepared from time to time by the Department or otherwise adjusting them so as to avoid fractional amounts or otherwise facilitate computation;
(d) for requiring that the liability in respect of a payment made in a tax week, in so far as the liability depends on any conditions as to a person’s age on retirement, shall be determined as at the beginning of the week or as at the end of it;
(e) for securing that liability is not avoided or reduced by the payment of earnings being made in accordance with any practice which is abnormal for the employment in respect of which the earnings are paid;
(f) without prejudice to paragraph (e), for enabling the Department, where it is satisfied as to the existence of any practice in respect of the payment of earnings whereby the incidence of minimum payments is avoided or reduced by means of irregular or unequal payments of earnings, to give directions for securing that minimum payments are payable as if that practice were not followed;
(g) for the intervals at which, for the purposes of minimum payments, payments of earnings are to be treated as made; and
(h) for this section to have effect, in prescribed cases, as if for any reference to a tax week there were substituted a reference to a prescribed period.
(4) Any contracting-out certificate for the time being in force in respect of an employed earner’s employment shall be conclusive that the employment is contracted-out employment.
(5) Regulations shall provide for the determination by the Board of any question whether an employment is to be treated as contracted-out employment or as to the persons in relation to whom, or the period for which, an employment is to be so treated.
(1) Subject to subsection (4), an occupational pension scheme can be contracted-out in relation to an earner’s employment only if it satisfies subsection (2) or (3).
(2) An occupational pension scheme satisfies this subsection only if—
(a) it complies in all respects with sections 9 to 20 or, in such cases or classes of case as may be prescribed, with those sections as modified by regulations; and
(b) the rules of the scheme applying to guaranteed minimum pensions are framed so as to comply with the relevant requirements.
(3) An occupational pension scheme satisfies this subsection only if—
(a) the requirements imposed by or by virtue of sections 18 and 22 to 28 and such other requirements as may be prescribed are satisfied in its case; and
(b) the rules of the scheme applying to protected rights are framed so as to comply with the relevant requirements.
(4) Where there are two or more occupational pension schemes in force in relation to an earner’s employment, none of which can by itself be a contracted-out scheme, the Board may, if they think fit, treat them for contracting-out purposes as a single scheme.
(5) A personal pension scheme can be an appropriate scheme only if—
(a) the requirements imposed by or by virtue of sections 22 to 28 and such other requirements as may be prescribed are satisfied in its case; and
(b) the rules of the scheme applying to protected rights are framed so as to comply with the relevant requirements.
(6) In this section “relevant requirements” means—
(a) the requirements of any regulations prescribing the form and content of rules of contracted-out or, as the case may be, appropriate schemes; and
(b) such other requirements as to form and content (not inconsistent with regulations) as may be imposed by the Board as a condition of contracting-out or, as the case may be, of being an appropriate scheme, either generally or in relation to a particular scheme.
(1) Subject to subsections (2) and (3), the protected rights of a member of a pension scheme are his rights to money purchase benefits under the scheme.
(2) If the rules of an occupational pension scheme so provide, a member’s protected rights are—
(a) his rights under the scheme which derive from the payment of minimum payments together with any payments by the Department to the scheme under Article 9 of the [S.I. 1986/1888 (N.I. 18).] Social Security (Northern Ireland) Order 1986 in respect of the member;
(b) any rights of the member to money purchase benefits which derive from protected rights under another occupational pension scheme or under a personal pension scheme which have been the subject of a transfer payment; and
(c) such other rights as may be prescribed.
(3) If the rules of a personal pension scheme so provide, a member’s protected rights are—
(a) his rights under the scheme which derive from any payment of minimum contributions to the scheme; and
(b) any rights of his to money purchase benefits which derive from protected rights under another personal pension scheme or protected rights under an occupational pension scheme which have been the subject of a transfer payment; and
(c) such other rights as may be prescribed.
(1) Subject to the provisions of this Part, an employment otherwise satisfying the conditions for inclusion in a contracting-out certificate shall be so included if and so long as the employer so elects and not otherwise.
(2) Subject to subsections (3) and (4), an election may be so made, and an employment so included, either generally or in relation only to a particular description of earners.
(3) Except in such cases as may be prescribed, an employer shall not, in making or abstaining from making any election under this section, discriminate between different earners on any grounds other than the nature of their employment.
(4) If the Board consider that an employer is contravening subsection (3) in relation to any scheme, they may—
(a) refuse to give effect to any election made by him in relation to that scheme; or
(b) cancel any contracting-out certificate held by him in respect of it.
(5) Regulations may make provision—
(a) for regulating the manner in which an employer is to make an election with a view to the issue, variation or surrender of a contracting-out certificate;
(b) for requiring an employer to give a notice of his intentions in respect of making or abstaining from making any such election in relation to any existing or proposed scheme—
(i) to employees in any employment to which the scheme applies or to which it is proposed that it should apply;
(ii) to any independent trade union recognised to any extent for the purpose of collective bargaining in relation to those employees;
(iii) to the trustees and managers of the scheme; and
(iv) to such other persons as may be prescribed;
(c) for requiring an employer, in connection with any such notice, to furnish such information as may be prescribed and to undertake such consultations as may be prescribed with any such trade union as is mentioned in paragraph (b)(ii);
(d) for empowering the Board to refuse to give effect to an election made by an employer unless they are satisfied that he has complied with the requirements of the regulations;
(e) for referring to an industrial tribunal any question—
(i) whether an organisation is such a trade union as is mentioned in paragraph (b)(ii), or
(ii) whether the requirements of the regulations as to consultation have been complied with.
(1) A contracting-out certificate shall state whether the scheme is contracted-out by virtue of subsection (2) or (3) of section 5.
(2) Where a scheme satisfies both of those subsections the employers, in their application for a certificate, shall specify one of those subsections as the subsection by virtue of which they wish the scheme to be contracted-out.
(3) A scheme which has been contracted-out by virtue of one of those subsections may not become contracted-out by reason of the other except in prescribed circumstances.
(1) Subject to the provisions of this Part, the scheme must—
(a) provide for the earner to be entitled to a pension under the scheme if he attains pensionable age; and
(b) contain a rule to the effect that the weekly rate of the pension will be not less than his guaranteed minimum (if any) under sections 10 to 12.
(2) In the case of an earner who is a married woman or widow who is liable to pay primary Class 1 contributions at a reduced rate by virtue of section 19(4) of the [1992 c. 7.] Social Security Contributions and Benefits (Northern Ireland) Act 1992, subject to the provisions of this Part, the scheme must—
(a) provide for her to be entitled to a pension under the scheme if she attains pensionable age and does not have a guaranteed minimum under sections 10 to 12; and
(b) satisfy such other conditions as may be prescribed.
(3) Subject to subsection (4), the scheme must provide for the pension to commence on the date on which the earner attains pensionable age and to continue for his life.
(4) Subject to subsection (5), the scheme may provide for the commencement of the earner’s guaranteed minimum pension to be postponed for any period for which he continues in employment after attaining pensionable age.
(5) The scheme must provide for the earner’s consent to be required—
(a) for any such postponement by virtue of employment to which the scheme does not relate; and
(b) for any such postponement after the expiration of five years from the date on which he attains pensionable age.
(6) Equivalent pension benefits for the purposes of the former legislation are not to be regarded as constituting any part of the earner’s guaranteed minimum pension.
(7) The benefits referred to in subsection (6) are any to which the earner may be immediately or prospectively entitled in respect of a period of employment which—
(a) was for him non-participating employment under that legislation; and
(b) was not on its termination the subject of any payment in lieu of contributions;
but subsection (6) excludes only so much of those benefits as had to be provided in order that the employment should for that period be treated as non-participating.
(8) In this section “the former legislation” means Part III of the [1966 c. 6 (N.I.).] National Insurance Act (Northern Ireland) 1966 and the previous corresponding enactments.
(1) An earner has a guaranteed minimum in relation to the pension provided by a scheme if in any tax week in a relevant year, earnings in excess of the current lower earnings limit (or the prescribed equivalent if he is paid otherwise than weekly) have been paid to or for his benefit in respect of employment which is contracted-out by reference to the scheme.
(2) Subject to section 11(1), the guaranteed minimum shall be the weekly equivalent of an amount equal to the appropriate percentage of the total of the earner’s earnings factors for the relevant years, so far as derived from earnings such as are mentioned in subsection (1) upon which primary Class 1 contributions have been paid or treated as paid.
(3) In determining the guaranteed minimum in a case where—
(a) earnings such as are mentioned in subsection (1) have been paid to a married woman or widow who is liable to pay primary Class 1 contributions at a reduced rate by virtue of section 19(4) of the [1992 c. 7.] Social Security Contributions and Benefits (Northern Ireland) Act 1992, and
(b) the tax week in which those earnings are paid falls in the tax year 1991-92 or any subsequent tax year,
the married woman or widow shall be treated for the purposes of this section as having such earnings factors derived from those earnings as she would have had if primary Class 1 contributions had been payable, and paid, upon them otherwise than at a reduced rate.
(4) Where the amount of a person’s earnings for any period is relevant for any purpose of subsection (1) or (2) and the Department is satisfied that records of those earnings have not been maintained or retained or are otherwise unobtainable, it may for that purpose—
(a) compute, in such manner as it thinks fit, an amount which shall be regarded as the amount of those earnings; or
(b) take their amount to be such sum as it may specify in the particular case.
(5) In subsection (2) the “appropriate percentage” means—
(a) in respect of the earner’s earnings factors for any tax year not later than the tax year 1987-88—
(i) if the earner was not more than 20 years under pensionable age on 6th April 1978, 1.25 per cent.;
(ii) in any other case 25/N per cent.;
(b) in respect of the earner’s earnings factors for the tax year 1988-89 and for subsequent tax years—
(i) if the earner was not more than 20 years under pensionable age on 6th April 1978, 1 per cent.;
(ii) in any other case 20/N per cent.;
where N is the number of years in the earner’s working life (assuming he will attain pensionable age) which fall after 5th April 1978.
(6) Regulations may prescribe rules as to the circumstances in which earnings factors are derived from earnings for the purposes of subsection (2).
(7) For the purposes of subsection (2) the weekly equivalent of the amount there mentioned shall be calculated by dividing that amount by 52.
(8) In this section “relevant year” means any tax year in the earner’s working life (not being earlier than the tax year 1978-79).
(1) Where in accordance with section 9(4) the commencement of an earner’s guaranteed minimum pension is postponed for any period and there are at least seven complete weeks in that period, his guaranteed minimum in relation to the scheme shall, for each complete week in that period, be increased by one-seventh per cent.—