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The resolution is part of the ongoing dialogue between the Commission and the Parliament and comes in response to the White Paper on Pensions published by the Commission in February last year. The committee backs comments made by the Commission in the white paper encouraging Member States to introduce or maintain a multi-pillar pension system. This approach would consist of a combination of public pensions in the first pillar; complementary pensions resulting from collective agreements, companies or national legislation in the second pillar; and private savings in the third pillar.
Dutch MEP Ria Oomen-Ruijten, who belongs to the European People's Party (EPP) and drafted the resolution, said: "We need safe and sustainable pensions in all Member States now and in the future. This is important for both young and old people. We should act by safeguarding public pensions, encouraging longer working lives and improving and increasing contributions to supplementary pension schemes."
The Committee went on to highlight the need to guarantee pension funds' investment strategies, particularly in light of the financial crisis. It urged the Commission to ensure pension funds' were not "jeopardised" by any possible changes to pensions legislation, particularly the IORP Directive.
In recent years, the pensions industry has been deeply divided over the revised IORP Directive, and more especially the first pillar of the new framework, which focuses on capital requirements.
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