|
The draft regulation is aimed at providing greater choice for people who wish to save for their retirement, and at the same time boosting the market for personal pensions. According to the Commission, only 27% of Europeans between 25 and 59 years of age have subscribed to a pension product.
"The pan-European pension product will bolster our capital markets union plan, as it will help channel savings towards long-term investments", said Vladislav Goranov, minister for finance of Bulgaria, which currently holds the Council presidency. “It will promote competition amongst pension providers, enabling them to sell pension products outside their national markets and giving savers more choice over how and where to place their savings."
Under the proposal, PEPPs would have the same standard features wherever they are sold. They would be offered by a broad range of providers, principally insurance companies, banks, occupational pension funds, investment firms and asset managers.
In Europe the personal pension market is currently fragmented, due to a patchwork of rules that impede the development of a market at EU level. In some member states, the market is virtually inexistent.
For products based on capital market instruments, choice is often limited. This leads to higher costs for savers and a shortage of liquidity on markets. In the United States, for instance, pension funds play a bigger role than in Europe as institutional investors.
The regulation would add a pan-European framework for people who wish to use PEPPs as a saving option. PEPPs would complement state-based, occupational and national personal pension schemes, but not replace or harmonise them.
PEPPs would present the following advantages for savers:
For pension plan providers, the regulation would bring the following opportunities:
Additionally, when a product reaches maturity, providers and savers would have different options for pay-outs.