The Pensions Act 2004 provides additional protection for members of defined benefit occupational pension schemes. In doing so it establishes both a pensions regulator and a pensions protection fund. The new rules impose funding obligations on employers which, it was thought by the legislators, employers would attempt to evade.
The legislation therefore includes anti-avoidance provisions, the knock-on effects of which will (1) radically change the way in which companies are bought, sold, restructured and wound-up (whether insolvent or solvent) and (2) create complex dilemmas for pension fund trustees and their advisers.
The anti-avoidance provisions of sections [35 and 39] are intended to protect pension members' benefits, whilst ensuring that it blocks abuses whereby pension liabilities can be offloaded onto the Pension Protection Fund. The provisions however may lead to unintended consequences for some businesses in the same group of companies, in situations where no abuse has taken place, for example:-
![]() Vol 13 No 10
Oct/Nov 2008
Cover: Monumental Tower rises out of the center of the Plaza Fuerza Aerea, Argentina Major New Titles published in October (pp. 1-31) Inner Temple Book Prize Shortlist (pp. 34) October Subscriptions & Supplements (pp. 38-45) Forthcoming Publications (pp. 47-51) Wildy Trips (p. 36) Wildy, Simmonds & Hill Publications (pp. 51-60) |
William Blackstone: Law and Letters in the Eighteenth CenturyEdited by:
ISBN: 0199550298
ISBN13: 9780199550296
Published: October 2008
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Country of Publication: UK
Binding: Hardback
Price: £29.99
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