Employers urged to ‘rethink pension policies’

-

Standard Life has said employers need to do more than simply encourage participation in pension plans.

The company stated employees are disengaged with their retirement planning and defined contribution schemes have lost up to 40 per cent of their value in the last year, while the over-65s now outnumber under-16s for the first time.

Andrew Dickson, senior business development manager at the firm, said the challenge for employers will be to develop a package that treats staff as consumers – as opposed to being a member.

"Employers need to move away from simply focussing on encouraging participation through accumulating pension assets – and learn to engage with their staff, treating them like consumers," he added.

HRreview Logo

Get our essential weekday HR news and updates.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Keep up with the latest in HR...
This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is hidden when viewing the form
Optin_date
This field is hidden when viewing the form

 

Meanwhile, Mark Brookes, spokesperson for the National Association of Pension Funds, has said it is a "myth" that young employees do not save into workplace pensions.

He added that the most important thing is for them to have as much information as possible on the subject.

Latest news

Employers turn to temporary staff as permanent hiring slowdown eases

Temporary recruitment rose at the fastest pace since April 2023 as employers favoured flexible staffing while permanent placements continued to fall.

Amrit Sandhar: The hidden productivity crisis and the critical role for HR

The latest Gallup State of the Global Workplace report is a sobering read. Global engagement levels have fallen to just 20%.

Breastfeeding business owner turned away from Amazon course

Amazon has apologised after a breastfeeding entrepreneur was unable to attend an in-person business programme because of its site access rules.

Major employers back drive to cut workplace sickness

More than 250 organisations have joined a government-backed programme designed to help people remain in work and return sooner after illness.
- Advertisement -

Employees increasingly building businesses around their day jobs

More workers are launching businesses alongside full-time employment, with many incorporating companies during evenings, nights and lunch breaks.

Chronic stress becoming ‘normalised’ at work, psychiatrist warns

Workers are increasingly treating chronic stress and exhaustion as normal, despite growing concerns over burnout and mental health.

Must read

Alex Young: Play the long game in response to the recruitment crisis

"The nationwide problem with recruitment - across any sector - was labelled a crisis early on, but if it was a crisis back then, it surely risks being a catastrophe now," says Alex Young.

Beth James: The millennial movement

Office culture has changed considerably in recent years with a shift in lifestyles, rising expectations and a move in people’s needs and values all contributing to a significantly different workplace than ten or even five years ago. To take one example, two thirds of UK employees today claim they would change jobs to increase their job satisfaction, while fewer than half see pay as a primary motivator.
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you