Further delays to the Pension Dashboard Programme

Further delays to the Pension Dashboard Programme

Have you heard of the Pensions Dashboard Programme? Back in 2016, the Treasury and the Financial Conduct Authority said; “[The Treasury] should challenge the industry to make a pensions dashboard available to consumers by 2019, bringing together industry and consumer representatives to help them set direction and drive progress.” This was in the wake of the introduction of pensions flexibility and the replacement of the old state pension scheme with the single-tier new state pension. 

One central information dashboard 

The logic of the proposal was indisputable. Together, the reform of both state and private sector retirement provision, the 2012 launch of automatic enrolment for workplace pensions and changing employment patterns had created a need for a pensions dashboard. In theory, one central information dashboard would give individuals the opportunity to keep track of their various pension entitlements and understand what income they might receive when work ended. 

Sounds great, right? 

Unfortunately, government theory and government practice rarely have much in common with each other, especially when large IT projects are involved. It wasn’t until that 2019 date that the Pensions Dashboards Programme (PDP) was established by an arm of the Department for Work and Pensions. The PDP was charged with responsibility for “designing and creating the pensions dashboards ecosystem, which contains the digital architecture that will make dashboards work.”  

So how far away is it? 

The PDP has since presided over a series of delays. At the beginning of 2023, 31 August 2023 was meant to mark the first “connection deadline” for pension schemes to link to the dashboard. However, in March, a parliamentary statement revealed the target would not be met but gave no new date. Three months later, another parliamentary statement supplied the missing information – 31 October 2026. 

With no apparent sense of irony, the statement said that “the government remains as committed as ever to making pensions dashboards a reality and we are ambitious about their delivery.” On the same day, the government also announced a delay to the deadline for filling gaps in national insurance contributions, although ironically that will still end 18 months before the dashboard deadline.  

The unspoken message is clear – if you want to understand how pension arrangements fit together, non-governmental advice is essential.  

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The Financial Conduct Authority does not regulate tax or benefit advice. 

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