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830   3 October 2003   

Pensions 
conspiracy of silence

My hunch is that the inadequacy of old age pension provision - both public and private - is the greatest common political concern among our fellow-citizens.  Yet Bournemouth was silent on the matter.  Very few Fringe meetings addressed it - mainly those sponsored by the financial services industry salivating at the prospect of further business - as "State provision" loses momentum.  The vultures are foregathering.  Only Frank Field (a rare smile from him, here...) came up with a new perception, and a true shaft of realism.

For the problem is not actual poverty in old age, which Gordon Brown harps on about.  And moving as they are, the real issue is not the plight of today's pensioners.  The issue is the confidence with which today's middle-aged can look forward to the closing of their lives, once their earning-capacity has gone, their powers waned, or their opportunities closed-down.  The problem is less one of actual poverty than of anticipatory poverty.  That is a worry for everyone, regardless of of status, class or bank-balance.  And it can be crippling, overshadowing other plans, corroding personal confidence, undermining family life.

And those worries are compounded by the collapse of confidence in the "private" provision of pensions.  The Stock Market, the "financial services sector", has failed too many people for them to become the trusted providers of pensions again - at least, for any but the very well-off.  Both Government Ministers and businessmen conspire to pretend that is not true - they have a common interest in pretending that State provision can properly remain minimal, and that responsibility for additional pensions-savings can safely be passed to the market, and to individual savings choices.

The problem is, that is not true.  It is Potemkin village of the political imagination.  Frank Field contends correctly that there must be the foundation-rock of reliable state provision at a reasonable level (he says 25% of average wages, so equal to c. £125 per week at current rates), which could then be supplemented by personal investment.  Without any increase in contributions, he reckons that such a pension could be promised at age 72.

Now - that seems an unpalatable proposition at first.  But if true (and he promises to publish these findings soon) it would give us the first perception of a possible new system.  My own view is that the pension should be £150 pw (at current rates) payable at 70.  Neither industry nor Government is keen to acknowledge the case for such a "high" State pension - and that is where the conspiracy of silence comes in. 

But if that can be reliably calculated, we can calculate the cost of bringing that age forward to 70, where I think it should be.  If each citizen, regardless of marital status, were to receive £125 per week, and could rely on that at a given age, we could all plan our lives accordingly - so much the more, if the figure were £150 per week (the recommended Age Concern level).  Many middle-age worries would be dispelled, and consumer confidence much boosted.  Some would simply save to "buy" one or two years earlier retirement, at the State level.  Others would accept the risk of the "late" starting age, but "buy" a higher level of pension, to top up the State provision from 70 onwards.  Those decisions would all depend on personal philosophy, medical history, family position - as indeed they should.

  • So I am grateful to Frank Field.  He vindicated my lottery-type choice of "which Fringe meeting to go to", last Wednesday lunchtime.

Do you share my view of the importance of this issue?  Drop me a line

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831  3 October 2003  

Unemployment
the hidden fear

Gordon Brown gave a great barn-storming speech last Monday.  He revelled in the last six-years of "economic success", and he is entitled to do so.  He is even entitled to take full credit for his welfare-to-work drive, with all its Scottish Presbyterian overtones. 

But this record obscures a key underlying systemic weakness of the UK system, which Labour should not ignore - namely, the woeful inadequacy of UK unemployment benefit.  We should be learning lessons from the current debate about Directors' periods of notice - all workers should have a decent period of notice on full pay, to enable them to adjust to the loss of employment.  That is what the bosses fix for themselves, and what's sauce for the goose...

I advocate a new form of universal Adjustment Pay.  This would apply to all employees, regardless of firm-size, public or private sector.  Its object would be to give every employee faced with job-loss a fair opportunity to find a new job, without disruption to family and social life.  It would be funded by a State fund to which employers would make a substantial contribution, by way of supplement to taxation otherwise payable.  It would replace both the Redundancy Payments system, and the concept of wrongful dismissal - both of which have their roots in a model of the employment relationship which is not longer appropriate.

NB  Recent Court cases, in which two over-65 pensioners were refused the right to sue for Redundancy Pay, as well as damages for wrongful dismissal, highlight the close links between these ideas.  An action for damages is founded on the proposition that a "civil wrong" has been committed which causes damage or loss - for which compensation should be paid (i.e. "damages").  But if the injured party is already entitled to receive "remuneration" following the wrongful dismissal, if follows that no compensation will ordinarily be payable - the real wrong, after all, is the unjust loss of remuneration.  Thus if you get rid of the idea of wrongful dismissal, and revert to the earlier principal that every employer is entitled to terminate a job contract upon proper notice, no "wrong" is committed by the act of dismissal-with-notice, however "unreasonable" it may be.  The sole question of justice/injustice is the length of the required notice, and whether or not the employee has a reasonable chance of searching for a new job.  To require a long period of notice, rather than creating the concept of "wrongful dismissal", is an alternative way of resolving the same injustice.

Let me pause there.   English common law has always acknowledged - in dealing with the middle classes - that periods of notice should be sensibly related to the relative ease of difficulty of finding alternative employment.  "Middle management", or middle-ranking professionals, are accorded six-month notice periods (if not otherwise agreed) and top-people (Managing Directors....) commonly get twelve-months.  When it comes to the working-classes, the English Courts have been more coy, ordinarily ruling that the period of notice should simply reflect the periodicity of wages - if paid weekly then one week, if paid monthly then one month.  These conventions reflect a legal context in which there was no concept of "wrongful dismissal" (which was a late-20th century legislative intervention").

I advocate a return to that principle, for every employee.  Effectively, every employee should be entitled to six month's notice, during which his remuneration would be maintained at its established level (Adjustment Pay) - permitting the employee to search for new employment during that period and dispensing with any obligation to "work out the notice".  The employer would continue to make Adjustment Pay payments precisely as before, with the right to recover part of the moneys from the State fund. Employers would be encouraged to give the employee positive assistance to find comparable employment, for if that could be achieved in a shorter period, the obligation to pay "Adjustment Pay" would cease.  Disputes would inevitably arise over the "suitability" of comparable employment, but that could be resolved by local Job Centres, with appeal to an Industrial Tribunal.

Consider the advantages.

  • To the Employee - the confidence that, at every salary level, there was no possibility of losing ones position upon less than six-months' notice - that there would always  be a fair chance to adjust to changing circumstances, before facing the big drop to lower benefit levels.  That would constitute the most enormous boost to consumer confidence, and workers' well-being.  Yet it is no less than the middle-classes have always engineered for themselves - and Labour should be giving access to this support - to the many, not just to the few.
  • To the Employer - the confidence that, in assessing the eternal tensions of hiring and firing - the costs of firing could be precisely calculated, and that no further obstacles could be placed in the way of corporate change.  The removal of the constraints of "wrongful dismissal" would lift an enormous procedural burden from all employers, and give them the freedom to get on with the difficult task of ensuring that trading firms survive, in an increasingly competitive market-place.  Industrial Tribunal proceedings, most of which result in awards equivalent to less than six months' wages, would be slashed.

These suggestions will initially antagonise many to the Left of me.  So let me deal with the likely objections.

Objection  It is wrong to deprive long-serving workers of their "lump-sum redundancy" payments, upon which they may have come to rely.

Response:  Fair transitional arrangements would be essential.  But the Redundancy Payments system was the brainchild of Frank Cousins in the 1960s: he saw workers' as acquiring a long-term quasi-property right in "the job", and a lump-sum service-related payment was therefore appropriate.  We now realise that employment is not like that, and that it is a continuing process, in which all workers have to find their way, from year to year, finding new ways of earning a living - we live in a dynamic, mobile system, and the task to equip workers to deal with that mobility.

Objection Workers need to protection of the "wrongful dismissal" laws - employers will otherwise be give free rein to behave unjustly, and badly. 

Response:  All legal proceedings, in respect of wrongful dismissal, are effectively actions for damages - no use has been made, in the UK, of the power to order the reinstatement of a wrongfully dismissed employee.  We understand the practical difficulties of that jurisdiction, and no use has been made of it.  And damages rarely exceed six months' wages.  If every worker were automatically entitled to full-wage support for up to six months, in order to obtain alternative employment, the foundation of any damages claim would in practice fall away.

Objection  But that would "lose" all those cases where wrongful dismissal has been on race, or gender, or disability grounds - you cannot eliminate those!

Response:  I would not.  Discrimination would remain actionable - it is a separate legal wrong, quite apart from "wrongful dismissal".  So that is a misunderstanding: such cases would remain actionable.

Objection  You would simply remove all constraints on employers - they would sack employees at the drop of a hat!

Response: Employers can do that already - and in terms of the working on the economy, it is right that they should be able to do so.  The TUC is wrong to press for "European" constraints.  Continental systems which place legal restrictions upon the right-to-fire are unwise, systemically flawed.  The real wrong - the real injustice - lies not in the dismissal, but the lack of resources and support available to the worker to find a new adjustment to the labour market.  Adjustment Pay would address that great underlying wrong, extending a legal device which the English middle-classes had long worked out for themselves...

This measure, coupled with the payment of a decent State pension, would bring peace of mind to millions upon millions of our fellow citizens - and would bother be sound socialist solutions.

What do you think?  Drop me a line

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