The Scotsman

Urgent action demanded on pension scams

● MPS want ban on cold calls to prevent people losing life savings

- By VICTORIA SHAW

Urgent action is needed to ban pensions cold calls to prevent people from being conned out of their life savings, according to a committee of MPS.

The Work and Pensions Select Committee also said people should be given guidance as a default option before they access their pension pot, unless they expressly opt out.

It said it welcomed a commitment made by the government to banning pensions cold calling but said it should now take “urgent legislativ­e action”, through the Financial Guidance and Claims Bill.

Under the committee’s proposals, an enforceabl­e ban should be introduced by June 2018 at the latest.

A clause in the Bill would enable a ban on pensions cold calls but it is flawed because it ties the ban to a new financial guidance body being set up, the committee said, which could delay the ban until 2020.

The MPS said: “It is much more urgent than that. We recommend a new clause which would require the Government to introduce a ban by June 2018 at the latest.”

Committee chairman Frank Field said pensions are “rich pickings” for scammers offering over-the-top returns or seemingly clever advice.

He said: “Every day that passes without a ban, people are being avoidably conned out of their life savings.

“There is no need to overcompli­cate this: our proposal would see an enforceabl­e ban in place by summer, closing at least one door on rafts of scammers at a stroke.” Mr

0 The Work and Pensions Select Committee wants pensions cold calling banned by next June Field continued: “Making guidance the default option, combined with the ban on cold calling, would be a simple but big step forward in consumer protection in the era of pension freedoms.

“The government should use the Bill that has just arrived in the Commons to legislate to protect pensions now.”

The committee said the risks of being conned have been heightened since the 2015 pension freedoms, which give over-55s a wider range of choices over how they use their pension pot.

It said the combinatio­n of high financial value and low saver engagement has made pensions a scammer’s “perfect storm”, with the committee having heard examples of investment­s such as diamonds, overseas proper- ty developmen­ts, forestry and film. The scale of scamming is likely to be grossly underestim­ated by official reports, the committee said, and the problemofp­eoplebeing­pushed towards “completely legal but totally inappropri­ate” investment­s which fall short of fraud needs to be tackled.

The Treasury said: “We’re bringing forward legislatio­n to ban pensions cold calling, tightening HM Revenue and Customs rules to stop pensions scammers and fraudulent schemes, and preventing the transfer of money from occupation­al pension schemes into fraudulent ones.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom