LC: Pensions fund reforms set to boost social investment

20 Jun 2018 11:08 AM

The Government has announced that it intends to act on Law Commission recommendations to clarify and strengthen the laws on pension funds and social investment.

In the final response to the Pension Funds and Social Investment report, Minister for Pensions and Financial Inclusion, Guy Opperman, and Minister for Sport and Civil Society, Tracey Crouch, agreed to implement reforms recommended by the Commission which could help unlock more ethical investments.

And alongside this, the Ministers have also pledged to consider what more could be done to increase the consideration of the wider impacts of pension investments.

Law Commissioner Stephen Lewis said:

“This move by Government could help unlock billions of pounds of investment which not only has the potential to do well financially, but also do good at the same time.

“Implementing our recommendations will now bring much needed legal clarity to fund managers and give scheme members a chance to have their say in ethical investments, should they wish to.”

Saving for a better future

The majority of employees in the UK are now saving into a pension and by 2030 the amount invested in defined contribution schemes is expected to total some £1.68 trillion.

This raises questions about how the new pension assets are to be invested and whether at least a proportion could be invested for the wider social good.

In November 2016, the Government asked the Law Commission to look at how far pension schemes may or should consider issues of social impact when making investment decisions. And to identify any legal or regulatory barriers preventing them from doing so.

The Pension Funds and Social Investment report was published in June 2017.

It identified steps which could be taken by the Government and regulators to lift barriers to social investment. This included:

Now in a response published on gov.uk the Government has agreed to work towards implementing our reforms and pledged to continue “to work with the financial services industry and regulators in growing the positive impact of pensions in the UK”.