Pension guarantees hit by EU-IMF terms

THE ECONOMIC crisis and terms of the International Monetary Fund-European Union bailout mean the Government cannot commit to …

THE ECONOMIC crisis and terms of the International Monetary Fund-European Union bailout mean the Government cannot commit to pay the estimated €13 billion actuarial cost of providing a State guarantee of the full pension entitlements of workers in cases of employer insolvency, the secretary general at the Department of Finance has told the Commercial Court.

Kevin Cardiff made the assertion in a witness statement in proceedings in which 10 former workers with Waterford Crystal allege the State has failed to meet its obligations under an EU directive, the “Insolvency Directive”, to “protect” workers whose employers become insolvent.

Mr Cardiff said it was not possible for the Government to guarantee either the €13 billion actuarial cost of full pension entitlements in insolvency situations or the lesser, unspecified, cost of paying less than 100 per cent of the entitlements of persons still working at the time of insolvency.

The action, which has implications for the pension entitlements of all workers whose employers become insolvent, opened at the court on Tuesday. However, as key issues in the case depend on proper interpretation of the directive, Mr Justice Brian McGovern said yesterday he would refer the case to the European Court of Justice.

READ SOME MORE

The action has been adjourned to today to allow the sides prepare draft questions for referral which would then have to be approved by the judge.

The case arose after Waterford Crystal was placed in receivership in January 2009 and the company’s pension schemes were wound up with a deficit of more than €100 million. All 10 plaintiffs are aged about 65 and ceased employment with the company on dates in 2008 and 2009.

Given the funding levels in the pension schemes, each plaintiff has been offered payments representing between 18 per cent and 30 per cent of their entitlements but say, following a 2007 European court decision, they are entitled to at least 49 per cent.

They also allege measures taken by the State in purported transposition of the directive are inadequate, including the Protection of Employees (Employers’ Insolvency) Act, 1984; the Pensions Act, 1990; and the Pension Insolvency Payments Scheme. None of those measures guarantee a minimum entitlement when there is a deficit in the pension fund following an employer’s insolvency. The plaintiffs claim the directive does not necessarily require a State guarantee of pension entitlements but does require the State to take measures to protect workers.

In his witness statement, while rejecting claims the State failed to properly transpose the directive, Mr Cardiff said the severe economic crisis and demanding budgetary constraints arising from the EU-IMF programme mean the Government does not have the resources to provide the commitment sought by the plaintiffs.

A guarantee for pension schemes, no matter how qualified or limited, would amount to a “serious threat” to the commitments made to the IMF and EU given the likely costs involved and the implications for the Government’s creditworthiness, he said.

Mary Carolan

Mary Carolan

Mary Carolan is the Legal Affairs Correspondent of the Irish Times