Seven years on, key parts of pensions law rolled out

| 24/02/2023 | 22 Comments

(CNS): Cabinet has approved a new commencement order that will bring most of the outstanding parts of the National Pensions (Amendment) Act into force this year, some seven years after the law was passed. The provisions pave the way for more transparency and accountability on the part of the pension providers, naming and shaming of rogue employers, as well as providing for higher fines and even imprisonment for bosses who don’t make the mandatory contributions for their staff.

Director of Labour and Pensions Bennard Ebanks said the rollout would fortify the pensions regime. “Non-compliant employers will be held more accountable, members will be provided with greater information, administrators’ responsibilities will be increased and the Department of Labour and Pensions will be strengthened,” he said.

The commencement of the rest of the law is still being phased, with some of the new rules relating to the introduction of mandatory Annual General Meetings (AGMs) and twice-yearly statements for members already in effect from 1 January. On 1 March the introduction of higher fines will be rolled out as well as the requirement for pension firms to publish a list of all registered plans, administrators and agents.

Labour Minister Chris Saunders, who has responsibility for pensions, has previously criticised the pension regime for private sector workers and suggested it is inadequate and not fit for purpose. While he was in opposition he said that having nine providers for such a small workforce was a “ridiculous system” that needed a complete overhaul.

However, since taking up office just under two years ago, Saunders has not provided any specific plans for any major changes. But he said the commencement of the outstanding sections of the National Pensions (Amendment) Act passed in 2016 was long overdue.

“It’s important that pension providers educate their members on the pension plans they are entered into and for employers to remain in compliance with the regulations that guide them,” he said in a press release. “The National Pension Act was enacted for the benefit of employees and these changes were made to increase transparency and members’ engagement. It is therefore important that employees take the time out to understand their pension plans to better plan for their future.”

Outlining the changes, officials said that all pension plan administrators (PPAs) will now be required to host annual general meetings (AGMs) and provide members with statements twice per year. These changes allow all members to attend meetings with their pension providers to learn more and discuss concerns. The increase in statement frequency will provide more up-to-date information on expense ratios and investment returns on plans as well as the payment record of members’ employers.

In March, the requirement to publish a list of all registered pension plans, their PPAs, agents and key service providers will be rolled out, giving the general public an official list of registered pension plans so they can verify their plans. New provisions will enable the court to impose higher fines and possibly imprisonment for convicted employers. Officials said this follows comments from magistrates in open court that stronger penalties were needed for employers to take such offences seriously.

Then from 1 July, PPAs will be required to notify employees of a delinquent employer, within 60 days of notifying the government, in addition to a new obligation to collect interest on delinquent contributions and take action when an employer is delinquent, including contacting the employer or employees. If it is not resolved, then the administrator will be obligated to report it to the Department of Labour and after 60 days to notify the affected employees. PPAs will also be able to publish the names of the employers.

The DLP will at that time be able to demand the appearance of a delinquent employer in order to address the pension arrears and will also have the authority to publish breaches under the National
Pensions Act. These provisions are added to the ongoing ability to establish payment plans and
prosecute employers for offences.

In October, an Administrative Penalty System will be introduced that will create another enforcement tool similar to other departments with an enforcement mandate, officials explained. The requirement for ongoing training for PPAs will also be introduced. All new and ongoing PPAs will be required to provide the DLP with supporting evidence of their training on the management, administration and investment of the pension plan. Training on the National Pensions Act as well as the PPAs fiduciary duties will also be required.

The department said that the remaining few provisions of the legislation are to be implemented in a phased approach, after the review of the existing National Pensions (Pension Fund Investments)
Regulations. Future amendments or changes will require Cabinet approval before implementation.

See the National Pensions (Amendment) Act and the Commencement Order here.

For more information call 945-8960 or email dlp@gov.ky.


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Category: Business, Pensions

Comments (22)

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  1. Frustrated Caymanian says:

    Saunders blowing smoke , just like he was in regards to stamp duty exemptions for Caymanians.

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  2. Anonymous says:

    Maybe someone will police the providers now…DLP hasn’t a clue and CIMA doesn’t take any responsibility. Have a deep look..especially at late trading allocations CG and RF

  3. Anonymous says:

    Corruption and Lodge in Cayman, those two goes together like hunger and food.

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  4. Anonymous says:

    CIG needs to stop pretending that sub-market return mandatory pension schemes constitute the entire lifetime commitment for saving for a secure retirement. It’s not even close. You could have >$5mln socked away in your employer pension, and even then, it will barely be able to buy a tin of cat food for the pace of how CIG plans to meter it out. It is a huge hustle designed by small universe of thieving pension providers. Just give us our money, so we can actually invest and save.

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  5. Anonymous says:

    Bring back the pension holiday.

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  6. Elvis says:

    Nothing will change

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  7. Anonymous says:

    And when will the RCIP so much as investigate the theft of pension monies by unscrupulous employers?

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    • Anonymous says:

      isn’t that the pension boards job?

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      • Anonymous says:

        No. When the monies are deducted from the employee’s wages and then spent on shiny things for the bosses’ wife, that is a theft and a fraud and is very much the job of the police to deal with. A job they have failed to perform.

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        • Anonymous says:

          Not just failed. Refused.

          They have literally overseen and enabled our descent into chaos. We are so far in, we cannot tell which way is up.

    • Anonymous says:

      I’m still angry from government interference with my private pension 7 years ago and its retrospective effect.

  8. Beaumont Zodecloun says:

    I am so damn angry about the pension “scheme” that I can’t really comment on it right now. Maybe later, after I organise my thoughts.

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  9. Anonymous says:

    Lets really see if anything changes or if it will be business as usual for all the “connected” businesses.

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  10. Anonymous says:

    Pension Amendment Act should further cap those pathetic pensions from a MER of 1.5% fee down to .05% considering they do utterly nothing at all and are simply a middleman additional fee. Pension funds are up there as the biggest weasels on island.

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    • Anonymous says:

      Amen to that. Allow self direction for those willing to waive their future right to govt support. Let us pay down our mortgages rather than earn <2% net in a “Balanced” portfolio of nil interest government bonds. Or just unwind the whole hustle and let folks have their own money.

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  11. Anonymous says:

    one simple rule:
    if providers don’t meet their benchmarked targets…they must forfeit 80% of their fees.
    sick of other people gambling with my money, losing…but they still get paid…pure madness!

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    • Anonymous says:

      Forfeited fees to be returned to members of the scheme, not to CIG.

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      1
    • Anonymous says:

      presumably your concern is that they underperform their benchmarks? By mandating the forfeiture of fees if they underperform, you are actually incentivizing them to take more risk. I’m not sure your proposal will have the impact you think it will.

      Generally, though, the standard of on island pension fund managers is extremely poor. CIG would be better served allowing a broader range of investment options, rather than perpetuating the ‘captive’ industry that the CI pensions management business has become.

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    • Anonymous says:

      Adding pensions to the list of things that CIG will never fix along with, CaL, the dump, turtle farm, CINICO, Hurley’s roundabout, parking ticket machines at the airport(they don’t work again) CPA, DOE, RCIP quite an impressive list of dysfunctional government 🤡🤡🤡

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  12. Anonymous says:

    Zzzz. No lodge members will be prosecuted as a result.

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  13. Anonymous says:

    The networking culture of the Cayman Islands is rigged for the benefit of “successful” business owners and millionaire professionals. They are held in the highest of political and industry peer esteem, purely on the basis of their implied net worth, and without much (or any) scrutiny of how they got that way. Entirely absent is a scorecard for consideration of quality of service, public philanthropy, or honest dealings. In the real world, if you are an abusive business klepto not paying fair wages or benefits, you go to jail. In Cayman, you get invited to join Rotary, to eat bacon-wrapped shrimp at moody-Galas, and work the step and repeat photo booth in tuxedo. The reverence for crookedness is truly part of the pirate culture that needs to be shaken-off asap.

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