Press Release
- Review of errors in Guaranteed Minimum Pension
Payments
16 July 2009
A review by the National Audit Office of
overpayments to public service pensioners totalling £90 million has
found a complex and fragmented administrative process, prone to
error, and for which there is no clear overall
responsibility. The process requires effective joint working
between the parties involved (the five public service pension
schemes, HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC), and the Pension, Disability
and Carers Service (PDCS)) but they have failed to achieve
this.
The overpayments, and a smaller number of
underpayments, have affected over 90,000 retired soldiers, doctors,
nurses, teachers and civil servants. The errors occurred
because the pension schemes did not have Guaranteed Minimum Pension
information recorded for these members, which meant that the
schemes did not apply correct annual cost of living
increases. The five pension schemes involved plan to
write-off the resulting overpayments, and those pensioners who were
underpaid are now receiving the money to which they were entitled
in previous years.
The errors, which affect six per cent of
pensions being paid to members over state pension age in the five
schemes, occurred over many years. So far, the pension
schemes have identified 85,509 individual overpayments totalling
£90.2 million, and 4,917 underpayments totalling over
£191,000. The pension schemes are still working to resolve
more than 26,000 cases and so these figures are likely to rise.
Despite the complexity of the administrative
processes involved and the known history of problems – some of the
parties involved raised concerns about the process as far back as
the mid 1990s - few checks and controls were in place, which meant
that missing information on the Guaranteed Minimum Pension went
undetected, in some cases for over 20 years. No one party has
taken responsibility for overseeing the whole process, ensuring it
runs smoothly and resolving errors. The process therefore
broke down in a number of ways.
Amyas Morse, the head of the National
Audit Office, said today:
“This is a sad case of public
administration failure. Warnings were first sounded years ago
that there were problems but no one took responsibility for
resolving them. It is essential to prevent errors on this
scale from happening again, but this will happen only if one party
takes responsibility for the process as a
whole.”
Notes for Editors
-
The Government announced the errors in
December 2008 and said that the National Audit Office would carry
out a review of the payment errors.
-
The Guaranteed Minimum Pension was earned
between 1978 and 1997, by members of pension schemes (including the
five public service pensions schemes) that ‘contracted-out’ of the
state second pension (the earnings related element of the state
pension). The principle underlying this was that individuals
should not be any worse off as a result of their pension scheme
contracting out, and that the Guaranteed Minimum Pension should be
broadly equivalent to the additional/state second pension they
would have received had their scheme not ‘contracted out’.
-
The five public service pension schemes
affected by the errors were the armed forces, civil service,
judiciary, NHS and teachers.
-
The responsibility for the errors is split
between: the pension schemes and their payment contractors for
neglecting to check that they had the necessary information in
order to calculate payments correctly; HMRC for failing to have
adequate arrangements for tracking Guaranteed Minimum Pension
notifications which were rejected and returned by schemes, and for
not having checks in place to reduce the risk of notifications
being sent to the wrong pension scheme; and the PDCS for not always
finalising state pension claims either at all or properly, so there
was no trigger for HMRC to issue the Guaranteed Minimum Pension
notification, and for supplying HMRC with incorrect scheme
reference numbers, meaning that notifications were sent to the
wrong schemes.
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Press notices and reports are available from
the date of publication on the NAO website, which is at http://www.nao.org.uk/.
Hard copies can be obtained from The Stationery Office on 0845 702
3474.
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The Comptroller and Auditor General, Amyas
Morse, is the head of the National Audit Office which employs some
900 staff. He and the NAO are totally independent of
Government. He certifies the accounts of all Government
departments and a wide range of other public sector bodies; and he
has statutory authority to report to Parliament on the economy,
efficiency and effectiveness with which departments and other
bodies have used their resources.
Press Notice 41/09
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