Local government pension reform could unlock £40 billion for infrastructure

Government proposals to combine the Local Government Pension Scheme into a single national fund could unlock almost £40 billion of investment in infrastructure, a leading insurance company has estimated.

The estimate was made by Pension Insurance Corporation (PIC), which has led calls for LGPS reform.

PIC, a specialist insurer of defined benefit pension schemes, has been a long-term advocate of consolidating dozens of council pensions into a single fund.

PIC’s CEO, Tracy Blackwell, is a member of the British Infrastructure Council, which advised Labour in opposition on investment policy.

The idea of council pension reform is gaining momentum, with the Government launching a pension review to look at consolidating the 86 English local council schemes and potentially creating a single local government fund.

English council pensions manage a total of £400 billion of assets. Because that money is overseen by dozens of managers and local politicians, LGPS schemes often pay above-average fees and invest very little in the most productive assets such as venture capital, life sciences and infrastructure.

PIC said that if the LGPS schemes were amalgamated into a single fund, it could invest in a similar way to the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board (‘CPPIB’), which manages about £360 billion to fund Canadian public sector pensions.

The CPPIB, like other large Canadian public pension funds, has a sophisticated long-term investment strategy that involves investing directly in private companies and large infrastructure projects.

Around 9% of the CPPIB’s assets are invested in infrastructure. By contrast, LGPS figures suggest that barely 3% of its total assets are invested in infrastructure (see Notes).

PIC said that a single LGPS scheme running in a similar way to the CPPIB could invest up to £40 billion into infrastructure such as green energy, electricity grids and transport networks.

Tracy Blackwell, Pension Insurance Corporation CEO, said: “Consolidating many LGPS schemes into a single fund would give Britain a real sovereign wealth fund that could be run and managed to the same professional standards as world-leading schemes like Canada’s.

“A single LGPS with a sophisticated, long-term investment strategy might put up to £40 billion into vital infrastructure. That could make a big difference to the UK’s economic prospects. This shows that with the right approach to purposeful investment, pension assets can deliver huge economic and social value to Britain.”

In a briefing for policymakers on LGPS reform earlier this year, PIC estimated that LGPS consolidation could save taxpayers £1 billion a year in fees to investment managers (see Notes). The Government has now made a very similar estimate of potential savings.

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