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Pay & benefitsPensions

UK pensions shortfall exposed by US comparison

by Personnel Today 23 Aug 2005
by Personnel Today 23 Aug 2005

UK employers’ pension plans are four times as likely to be underfunded as their US counterparts, industry research shows.

Only 5% of UK pension plans are fully funded compared to 20% of US pension plans, according to HR consultancy Aon Consulting.

The average pension plan deficit of a UK company represents around seven months of pre-tax profit compared to only two months in the US.

About 25% of companies in the UK have pension plans with a deficit representing more than two years of profits. Fewer than 5% of US companies are in a similar position.

US companies put in cash contributions of more than 10% of plan assets in the past two years, while their UK counterparts contributed only 7%.

Employer contributions rose from £18bn in 1997 to £37bn in 2003 – the figures that the CBI cites when telling the government to ‘stop beating up on business’.

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However, Aon actuary, Andrew Claringbold, said: “This increase in contributions has been insufficient to compensate for a combination of falling bond yields, increasing life expectancy and poor equity performance.”

The recently launched Pension Protection Fund levy aims to encourage UK companies to have better funded pension plans.

Personnel Today

Personnel Today articles are written by an expert team of award-winning journalists who have been covering HR and L&D for many years. Some of our content is attributed to "Personnel Today" for a number of reasons, including: when numerous authors are associated with writing or editing a piece; or when the author is unknown (particularly for older articles).

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