The Pensions Dashboard: A Constructive Alternative
The Pensions Dashboard is a UK government plan to set up one large database from which every person can access their UK occupational pension data from all of their past and present employers. The previous post on this blog criticised it on the grounds of complexity and greatly increased risk of fraud. It could also have mentioned the lack of consent. The government has not asked me whether I want my personal data put on their new database!
Having said this, there is a risk that, when a pension plan member reaches retirement age, the employer and administrators may have lost contact with them. There are ad hoc arrangements whereby administrators can ask the DWP to help trace a missing member. This should be formalised and expanded. Only small amounts of data such as names, dates of birth and national insurance numbers would be needed. Either individuals or plan administrators could contact the new government agency and the resources needed would be a mere fraction of those for the proposed Pensions Dashboard. It should also be possible to implement it well before the current dashboard target date of October 2026.
In the meantime, employees should carefully keep their own records and advise plan administrators of changes of address etc. There is also a government website called “Find pension contact details”. It isn’t perfect, but it can often be helpful. The link is
https://www.gov.uk/find-pension-contact-details
(24/07/2023)











