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Pensions industry hopes Bell appointment could 'revive' auto-enrolment debate

The pensions industry is hoping that Torsten Bell's appointment as pensions minister could "revive" discussions about increasing the contribution rate for auto-enrolment pensions.

Torsten Bell, Labour's new pensions minister(Image: Resolution Foundation)

Industry leaders are hopeful that the appointment of Torsten Bell as pensions minister could reignite discussions about increasing the contribution rate for auto-enrolment pensions.

Bell assumed the pensions brief on Wednesday following a mini-reshuffle triggered by Tulip Siddiq’s resignation as City minister, as reported by .

Emma Reynolds, his predecessor, has taken over Siddiq’s former role. Bell previously served as chief executive of the Resolution Foundation, a left-leaning think tank that has advocated for higher auto-enrolment contributions to fund domestic investment and enhance financial security for retirees.

Auto-enrolment pensions were launched in 2012 to counteract the decline in workplace savings. The policy is widely regarded as successful.

According to government data, º£½ÇÊÓÆµ employees saved £114.6bn towards their pensions in the decade following its introduction in 2012, a real terms increase of £32.9bn. At present, the minimum contribution for these pensions is divided, with employers contributing at least three per cent and the employee the remaining five per cent.

However, in Ending Stagnation, a book co-authored by Bell during his tenure at the Resolution Foundation, he argued for an increase in contributions. "The next phase in its development should be a levelling up of the minimum contributions by both employers and employees to six percentage points (from three and five per cent respectively), representing a 50 per cent increase in total," he wrote.

"A capped amount of these savings should be made available for everyday contingencies – tackling precarity for individuals as we underpin higher investment for the economy as a whole."

stated an advocate for increased auto-enrolment rates in the pensions industry. This view supports that such changes will secure more adequate savings for future pensioners.