Fresh thinking is needed to make defined benefit (DB) schemes sustainable in wake of MPs' damning conclusions on British Home Stores (BHS), according to experts.
This week we want to know if Theresa May's (pictured above) government is downgrading pensions and if capital adequacy requirements for master trusts could make them insolvent.
The "superficial attractions" of the lifetime ISA (LISA) will "destroy pensions", former pensions minister Baroness Ros Altmann has warned.
Sir Philip Green owes it to pensioners at British Home Stores (BHS) to "find a resolution urgently", MPs have said in a scathing report into the retailer's collapse.
Art of Pensions 2016 - the competition run by legislative information service provider Pendragon in association with Professional Pensions - is now open for entries.
As part of our series looking at what firms did to win accolades at the UK Pensions Awards 2016, PP speaks to the Travers Smith pensions team about how their firm won the Pension Lawyers of the Year category.
The government will launch a new campaign highlighting the potential fines faced by small companies not complying with auto-enrolment (AE).
Dominating this week's most popular stories was coverage of the government's downgrading of the pensions brief, following Baroness Ros Altmann's resignation.
The Pensions Regulator (TPR) has published a discussion paper on how to drive up standards of pensions trusteeship and shape future regulatory policy.
The likelihood of the Pension Protection Fund (PPF) meeting its 2030 self-sufficiency target has risen to 93% in its 2015/16 report.