Client Affairs
UK Executive Pensions Provision – What Next

On A-Day, major pensions legislation was implemented in the UK: now pension scheme sponsors, scheme managers and members are catching up on ...
On A-Day, major pensions legislation was implemented in the UK:
now pension scheme sponsors, scheme managers and members are
catching up on the real and practical consequences of the new
rules. These rules improve the security and flexibility of
retirement benefits for many. But the impact of an overall limit
on the value of benefits that can be built up in a tax-favoured
environment potentially limits the freedom that some UK
executives enjoyed previously. How the recent landscape has
influenced the present Until now, the maximum benefits
payable from UK pension schemes were limited by reference to
company service and, for more recent entrants, salary. This
salary cap led companies to adopt various solutions to provide
pensionable benefits on earnings above the cap. The chart below
shows the predominance of various solutions in place among
FTSE100 companies before the recent change in the rules.
Before April 2006, the majority of companies were providing some
top-up to pension, mainly via an Unfunded Unapproved Retirement
Benefit Scheme (UURBS – usually on a defined benefit or DB
basis). Less common alternatives included making an adjustment to
salary or going via a Funded Unapproved Retirement Benefits
Scheme (FURBS – usually on a defined contribution, or DC basis).
Some companies had a variety of solutions. From 6 April 2006,
however, companies have had to implement alternatives, but have
done so in a vacuum. Decisions have been based more on past
practice than on any vision of the overall future of executive
provision. Now, with this watershed date passed, companies have a
chance to take stock and consider the opportunities open to them.
Which Way Are You Going? A stimulating range of options
exists for executives and executive boards to discuss, but
standing still is not one of them. Companies have had to take
action because many of the conditions under which the previous
arrangements worked no longer hold. For example, for tax reasons,
contributions are no longer being paid to FURBS. These may be
terminated and, depending on the status of the membership, as
well as tax and legal implications, payments could be made to
compensate the individuals concerned. Many UURBS are being
terminated and, where limits permit, transferred into the
company’s registered scheme. Transfers made before 6 July 2006
earn corporation tax relief. Any UURBS set up on a DC basis might
still work, depending on how the approved scheme is designed. Few
companies offered these, but there could still be a valid place
for them at some private companies, though under the new banner
of an Employer Financed Retirement Benefit Scheme (EFRBS). An
EFRBS is not an approved scheme (or a registered scheme as it is
now known). Although reserved on a company’s balance sheet, there
is no immediate funding of the benefit promise. Corporation tax
relief is deferred until benefits, which can be taken in any
form, are paid. If the design permits cash to be taken of less
than 25 per cent by value and the remainder is taken as an
annuity, then the proceeds can be paid free from employer’s
National Insurance contributions (currently 12.8 per cent). The
individual pays normal income tax on the entire proceeds
(including the cash). So What Are The Options?
Coming in at number one on the “keeping it simple” scale is the
offer of only the registered scheme. Any funds built up in excess
of the Lifetime Allowance (LTA), currently at £1.5m, either by
design or inadvertently, can be taken as lump sum, but there is
then a combined high rate of tax – currently 55 per cent. Because
contributions to the registered scheme attract corporation and
individual tax relief as well as relief from National Insurance
payments, and because the capital gains on funds are tax free,
one could view this as reasonable. But planning in this way is
unlikely to meet the expectation of existing executives or senior
hires that their total benefits would still be payable in a more
tax-effective way. More commonly, companies are making top-up
provisions. Pensionsville The EFRBS is now the only
pension-related alternative for executives who are affected by
the LTA. Surprisingly, a significant number of companies have
elected to set up DB-style EFRBS for executives close to or above
the new LTA. This is noteworthy because the tax position is not
as favourable as it was under the previous regime. But it may be
the combined attraction of security and the provision of similar
benefits to those enjoyed before the changes are seen as
advantages to which executives are accustomed. For practical
reasons, it is preferable that the executive be a member of only
the registered scheme or an EFRBS and not both simultaneously.
The change from a regime based on defined limits to one affected
by value and allowances means that it can be difficult to predict
in advance how much of the LTA may be used. Concurrent membership
makes this calculation even more complex. Advance planning is
essential to maximise tax efficiency. The timing of movement
between registered and unregistered schemes depends on the
employees’ individual career plans – whether they plan to retire
early, how much cash they might elect from the scheme, what
benefits they have accumulated already and, of course, their
attitude toward risk. One wise solution from a corporate
viewpoint is to hand responsibility for the final decision to the
individual (possibly facilitating outside independent expert help
for them). Salary Supplements The other common option is
to pay a salary supplement. This is both taxable and subject to
National Insurance contributions for the employer and employee –
a significant extra cost of 12.8 per cent for the employer alone.
Typically, the salary top-up is at a level that is less than the
cost of the corresponding defined benefits that the DB registered
scheme would provide. This makes sense. The funding cost to the
scheme will reflect all manner of judgements relevant to the
company and the scheme as a whole, while the flexibility of cash
can have a significant immediate value to the executive. Common
percentages are payments of 20 per cent to 30 per cent of pay
compared with possibly twice that to fund executive DB pension
provisions. Clearly this gap is large enough to cover the
employer’s additional National Insurance expense created from
making a top-up to salary rather than to a registered pension
provision. Some companies are sensitive to the disclosure
requirements for the salary and benefits of directors. The
payment of extra salary is very transparent when disclosed
compared to the more indirect provision of unapproved retirement
benefits. Interestingly, some employers are offering choice: a
choice of registered scheme or EFRBS, or between registered
scheme and salary supplement. This ensures full responsibility
rests with the individual. One consequence is that executives are
not always selecting the options that are most expensive to the
employer. Though this may seem illogical, perhaps it reflects the
reality that pensions don’t interest all individuals. The
simplest route may satisfy their requirements, owing, for
example, to the greater perceived security of the registered
scheme. What Now For Executives of UK Companies? Surveys
toward the end of 2005 anticipated a trend toward salary
supplements for executives affected by the new limits. This is
supported by our recent experience within the UK, where smaller
companies or those wishing to define their costs prefer this
route. Larger companies, anchored by a commitment to defined
benefits, are tending to embrace EFRBS. But even here some see
the Revenue’s simplification as a catalyst for radical change
and, as with the trend in registered scheme design, are opting
for the salary route for future provision. Many UK companies have
now taken time to have discussions with executives about their
retirement arrangements. The current level of understanding and
awareness of pension matters is higher than in the past
(countered somewhat by even more complexity of the underlying
infrastructure). One thing companies can expect is that
retirement benefits will be discussed at the recruitment stage
with most, if not all, senior hires. It will become commonplace
for companies to recruit someone who has already reached his or
her LTA and is looking for alternative provision. What Might
The Future Offer? Will a miscellaneous collection of possibly
different, individual solutions be sustainable when the number of
affected executives increases? In the UK, ten executives per
company are affected by the new rules on average. What if this
becomes fifty in five years? And what about the ones who have
left by then? Who will be administering the communication,
calculation and notification of amounts between the individuals,
Her Majesty’s Revenue & Customs and the company? For as long as
this is seen as a pensions issue, perhaps the ad hoc and
individual approach to provision (hopefully within a
company-specific overall framework) is all that can be done. In
the context of overall reward, we expect pensions to increasingly
be seen as a key part of total compensation, although it may be
driven to an extent by what executives demand. Companies need to
be aware of the issues and decide now on their own policy and
strategy in this area, in order to avoid each affected individual
becoming a one-off case, resulting in an unstructured, costly and
time-consuming mish-mash. dick.strattan@mercer.com
nigel.roth@mercer.com www.mercerhr.com