May plans tougher take-over rules to protect pensions

 

Bloomberg

Prime Minister Theresa May is set to impose new restrictions on company take-overs in the UK as part of a plan to protect workers’ pensions from “unscrupulous” bosses. If re-elected in June, May’s Conservatives will give authorities the power to block such deals and launch criminal prosecutions of company bosses who put pension schemes at risk, the party said.
“I am setting out our plans, if elected, to ensure the pensions of ordinary working people are protected against the actions of unscrupulous company bosses,” May said in an emailed statement. “Safeguarding pensions to ensure dignity in retirement is about security for families, and it’s another example of the choice in this election.”
May’s promise comes as new opinion polls show her party remains on course to win a bigger majority in the June 8 vote, which Tories say they need in order to strengthen the premier’s position ahead of Brexit negotiations.
Her focus on protecting pensions follows a public outcry in Britain over the collapse of the retail chain BHS after Philip Green, majority owner of clothier Arcadia group, sold the company. In February, he agreed to pay as much as 363 million pounds ($470 million) to compensate 19,000 former workers of the collapsed department store chain after months of haggling with the country’s Pensions Regulator.
Under May’s plan, any company pursuing a merger or acquisition valued over a set amount — or with more than a prescribed number of members — would have to notify the Pensions Regulator, which could then apply clearance conditions, the Conservatives said.
In extreme cases, where there was no credible plan or willingness to ensure the solvency of the scheme, the pension scheme or Pensions Regulator could be given new powers to stand in the way of takeovers, the party said in an emailed statement.

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