The 2010/11 levy is due to be kept stable at £700m,
but OPT is adamant that including public sector pay rises from wage
indexation calculations will pointlessly increase the burden on
private sector companies who are already struggling to maintain
defined benefit (DB) pension schemes.
“Official figures show that private sector
wage growth was running at just over 0.3 per cent including bonuses
in the year to April, far below the 3.6 per cent rise recorded for
the public sector,” explained Ben Shaw, development director
at OPT. “The PPF gives the impression it is treading water
on levy rises to help companies through troubled times. Taking a
large levy does help narrow its growing fund deficit but also likely
to lead to more employers collapsing.”
Shaw also pointed out that the Confederation of
British Industry (CBI) had raised the prospect of negative pay growth
in the private sector in coming months [link to story], with half
of companies planning pay freezes in the next 12 months and four
per cent set to impose wage cuts.
He also questioned whether the 3.7 per cent levy
rise last year when inflation was below zero, from £675m to
£700m, was proportional.
“Every company will have to wait until the
scaling factor is announced to know exactly how big their levy rise
will be and the impact on their business,” he concluded.
- Pensions
Age June 2009