Department for Work and Pensions
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15 per cent drop in employees’ pension saving since 2007. Webb – automatic enrolment will stop the savings slump

Automatic enrolment will reverse the slump in pension saving, with around half of British firms with no pension provision choosing NEST for their workers, Pensions Minister Steve Webb said yesterday as new research shows a drop of 15 per cent in employees’ pension saving.

Only a quarter of private sector employees are active members of their employers’ pension scheme in Britain today (26 per cent), down from a third in 2007 (31 per cent), representing a 15 per cent drop in employees’ pension saving overall. 

And only 31 per cent of private sector organisations currently offer any pension provision for their staff. This is down from 41 per cent in 2007.

45 per cent of firms without a current workplace scheme intend to enrol all their employees into NEST, the National Employment Savings Trust.  A further 11 per cent say they will set up their own scheme, while five per cent say they will use a combination of both.

Pensions Minister Steve Webb said:

"Automatic enrolment into workplace pensions will start the monumental shift we need to get millions more people in Britain saving for their retirement.  

"It’s a major change for business too, especially for firms that don’t currently offer pension schemes for staff and it is good news that so many say they will use NEST.

"NEST is designed around the needs of people who are new to pension saving, with low charges, costs and easy to use services. We expect around half of all new savers to be NEST members, including many low-paid and part-time workers, women and young people, who will get a contribution from their employer for the first time."

Most firms who already offer some form of workplace provision plan to keep all current members of their largest or only scheme in their existing scheme (60 per cent).  Six per cent plan to enrol all current members in to NEST.  Half of employers say they will use their existing scheme for all non-members and new employees, and 19 per cent would enrol all non-members and new employees into NEST.

Over half of all employers (55 per cent) who intend to keep at least some employees in their largest scheme say they are likely to maintain their current contribution levels for existing members.  A third (34 per cent) say they are likely to increase contributions. Only 6 per cent say they would reduce contributions.

Only around a fifth of all private sector firms offer some form of workplace based scheme open to new members. Even where employers offer open schemes access may be restricted to certain groups of employees such as those who had been working for the firm for a certain period of time.

Notes to Editors

  1. Employers’ Pension Provision Survey 2011 is available at:

          http://research.dwp.gov.uk/asd/asd5/rrs-index.asp

  1. The survey was conducted among a representative sample of private sector employers in Great Britain. The sample was drawn from the Inter-Departmental Business Register (IDBR); small businesses without employees were excluded, as was the public sector. In 2011, the population of all private sector employers in Britain with at least one employee comprised around 1.6 million organisations, which together employed around 20 million employees.
  2. The research was carried out by the National Institute of Economic and Social Research and TNS-BMRB on behalf of the Department for Work and Pensions.
  3. The research surveyed 3,093 private sector employers of all sizes in Great Britain. It is part of a series of surveys which have been carried roughly biannually since 1994.  The previous report was published in 2009.
  4. Automatic enrolment, starting in October, will require employers to automatically enrol all eligible workers into a workplace pension scheme and make a minimum contribution into the scheme.

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