The Scotsman

Discrimina­tion cases on grounds of age a very big issue relating to pension schemes

Consistenc­y in transition­al schemes not legitimate, say Natasha Meikle and Claire Mckee

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As employment tribunal claim numbers rise across the UK, we look at

the biggest issue on the topic of age discrimina­tion facing the courts (not to mention public sector employers and their employees) in 2019.

The Court of Appeal held at the end of 2018 that the transition­al provisions in two public sector pension schemes, designed to protect older workers, unlawfully discrimina­ted against younger workers on the grounds of age. In both cases the government argued that the difference in treatment was justified, but this was rejected. The transition­al protection­s concerned were in the pension schemes of judges and firefighte­rs.

The judges were members of the Judicial Pension Scheme (JPS) until it closed on 31 March 2015. After that date, judges have accrued benefits in the New Judicial Pension Scheme (NJPS). It was not disputed that NJPS benefit accruals are considerab­ly less valuable than those under the JPS. Transition­al provisions were put in place, offering full, tapered or transition­al protection depending on age. Some younger judges claimed they were directly discrimina­ted against on the grounds of age.

Similarly, the firefighte­rs were members of the Firefighte­rs Pension Scheme (FPS) until 31 March 2015, and after that date accrued benefits in the New Firefighte­rs Pension Scheme (NFPS). As with the NJPS, the terms of the NFPS are materially less favourable than the FPS. Similar full, tapered, transition­al or no protection was offered, depending on the age of the firefighte­rs, with a view to protecting those closest to retirement age. A group of firefighte­rs claimed they were directly discrimina­ted against on the grounds of age.

The Equality Act defines unlawful direct discrimina­tion as treating one person less favourably than another because of a protected characteri­stic. In relation to direct age discrimi

nation, difference­s of treatment on grounds of age will not constitute discrimina­tion if it can be shown that the treatment in question is a proportion­ate means of achieving a legitimate aim, that is, an appropriat­e means of achieving that legitimate aim and reasonably necessary to accomplish it. Case law had previously determined that in order to be legitimate, the aim must accord with a social or employment policy aim such as promoting inter-generation­al fairness, cushioning older workers against the effects of redundancy or rewarding experience.

In both cases it was conceded that the younger workers had been directly discrimina­ted against by reason of age but it was asserted that this was justified as a proportion­ate means of achieving a legitimate aim.

The government argued that for the judges the stated aim was to protect those closest to retirement from the

financial effects of pension reform or, put another way, a “moral and political” aim of being fair to those closest to retirement who would have less time to prepare for the impact of pension reform than those further away from retirement. The Court of Appeal found that the real reason the government had incorporat­ed transition­al provisions was a desire for consistenc­y: similar provisions had been agreed with trade unions for other public sector workforces. However, consistenc­y requires like cases to be treated alike and, in the case of the judges, the position was different as, the older the judges were, the less adversely they were affected by the reforms. There was no rational explanatio­n put forward to justify consciousl­y treating a group, who were the least adversely affected, more favourably. The Court of Appeal found that the transition­al provisions went beyond what was necessary either to achieve consistenc­y or to protect those closest to retirement and was therefore not a legitimate aim.

Turning to the firefighte­rs case, neither party was happy with the decision at lower level and both sides appealed to the Court of Appeal. Again, the court considered that no legitimate aim was establishe­d and that there had been unlawful discrimina­tion.

There will be a raft of public sector and quasi-public sector schemes affected by the firefighte­rs case. It is possible that it may be distinguis­hed from the judges case and that an appeal to the Supreme Court may be successful.

Natasha Meikle and Claire Mckee are Associates at Dentons

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