My Lords, Clause 37 is headed: “Automatic enrolment: powers to create general exceptions”. I am tempted to rest my case there but I will press on a little. I hope that this will be a relatively uncontroversial amendment that the Minister can accept.
If the Committee looks at Clause 37, it will see immediately that it is drafted very broadly—too broadly, I suggest. In effect, it gives the Government the power by regulation to create exceptions from the employer duties under auto-enrolment in a way or to an extent that could undermine the intention of Parliament in establishing auto-enrolment in the first place.
When this clause was discussed in another place, the Pensions Minister said that the Government needed the powers to make regulations in order to ensure that employers do not automatically have to enrol people whom it will be a waste of time to enrol because they will be immediately removed; for example, people who have resigned, are retiring or have used their lifetime tax allowance. Apparently the clause is broadly worded because, the Minister said in the other place, we cannot predict the future need for exceptions. I suspect that our Minister’s brief contains similar assurances.
Clause 37(2) inserts a provision into the Pensions Act 2008 which enables the Secretary of State by regulation to provide for exceptions to the employer duty that may,
“be framed by reference to a description of worker, particular circumstances or in some other way”.
We accept that there will be circumstances in which it will be inappropriate to auto-enrol someone who is likely to want to be removed immediately, but it is our
view that the clause is unnecessarily widely drafted—a view that is shared by others, including the TUC and the CBI.
In Committee in another place, the shadow Pensions Minister, my honourable friend Gregg McClymont, quoted from a letter from the CBI in which it expressed support for the intention of the clause but said it was too broadly drafted because:
“The inclusion of ‘in some other way’ would provide too broad a power to government to change the scope of automatic enrolment at any time it saw fit. For instance, it would provide the Secretary of State with a secondary legislation power to exempt some businesses. This is a move the CBI could not support, as it undermines the consensus that was reached on pensions reform by giving exempted firms a cost advantage”.—[Official Report, Commons, Pensions Bill Committee, 9/7/13; col. 352.]
If the Government want to exempt a category of business, they should come back to the Floors of both Houses and amend their legislation. This is not fanciful. It is not long since the Beecroft report recommended that micro-employers be exempted entirely from auto-enrolment.
This amendment makes it clear that Clause 37 shall not be used to exempt entire classes of business, such as small or medium-sized employers. This will ensure that the Government’s apparent intention for auto-enrolment to apply to all categories of employer and business will be honoured. If the Minister is of the same view as the Pensions Minister on this point—in other words, if it is the Government’s intention that no such general exemption should be made—there can be no reason to resist this amendment. If he does, he has some explaining to do.