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Auto enrolment: employers can't afford to wait any longer for start of pension scheme

Auto enrolment: employers can't afford to wait any longer for start of pension scheme

Irish Times19-05-2025

After years of promises and planning, Ireland's long-awaited
auto-enrolment pension scheme
, has hit another bump in the road. Much delayed, but planned for a September 2025 launch, the Government has now confirmed it will be delayed by 'a small number of months'.
The scheme is now set to begin on January 1st, 2026.
When it arrives, auto enrolment will mark one of the most significant Irish pension reforms in decades. But shifting timelines and a lack of clear communication have significant implications for employers and employees alike.
Minister for Public Expenditure Jack Chambers cited the 'enormous scale' of the initiative and the need for extensive cross-departmental coordination. With global economic conditions unsettled, there's also a clear sense that the Government is being extra cautious about adding pressure to businesses already navigating significant volatility.
READ MORE
The official line is a delay of just a few months, but co-ordinating across departments, building a new national platform and enrolling more than 800,000 people is a significant undertaking.
[
Half of small firms not prepared for auto pension enrolment, says Irish Life
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]
Employers were told to prepare for 2025, and many already have. A further delay creates confusion and risks undermining confidence in a system that needs buy-in from day one.
For business owners, particularly small and medium-sized businesses, this delay is a mixed bag.
Neil McDonnell, chief executive of Isme, described the delay as a
"
welcome development' adding: 'This is a recognition that businesses need help and that we need to slow down the velocity of cost increases for businesses. We are in favour of auto enrolment, but we have just seen business costs increase at too fast a rate in the last two years.'​
In terms of the delayed implementation, there are a number of things employers should review:
Administrative adjustments: revisit implementation timelines to ensure payroll systems and HR policies are adaptable to the updated schedule;
Employee communication: clear and timely updates help maintain transparency and trust;
Strategic planning: use the extra time to refine pension strategies so they align with business goals and employee needs.
On one hand, the delay eases immediate pressure on businesses. It gives companies more time to prepare, particularly useful for those still getting their systems and payroll aligned.
On the other hand, for the many businesses that have already invested time, money and resources into being ready, it's frustrating.
And this isn't just about compliance. Pensions are now a key part of an employer's value proposition. In a competitive hiring market, a solid pension plan can make all the difference.
For every €3 a worker saves, the employer matches it with €3, and the State tops it up with €1. It's a strong model. But every delay means lost time, lost savings and lost momentum
Government delays shouldn't stop businesses from strengthening what they already provide.
For the near 800,000 workers who would benefit from auto-enrolment, primarily those aged 23 to 60, earning over €20,000 without an occupational pension, this delay means more time relying on a State pension that was never designed to cover today's
cost-of-living crisis
.
The scheme's design is simple and compelling, for every €3 a worker saves, the employer matches it with €3, and the State tops it up with €1. It's a strong model. But every delay means lost time, lost savings and lost momentum.
Businesses need a clear timeline and employees deserve transparency. If the roll-out is being reconsidered, that's understandable, but there is a need to communicate what's next. Uncertainty makes planning harder, especially for SMEs already stretched by inflation, wage growth and ongoing compliance changes.
While the delay is frustrating, it's also an opportunity. Business leaders shouldn't pause their preparations, they should use this time to get ahead.
If you run a business, this is the moment to make sure your pension offering isn't just compliant, but competitive. Take a good look at what you already offer.
Is it meeting your employees' expectations? Is it simple to manage? Is it something you're proud to talk about in a job interview?
Employees are paying attention. They're more aware than ever that relying on the State pension alone won't be enough. A strong, clearly communicated pension scheme is a powerful part of your employer brand, and one that can help you retain talent and stay ahead of the curve.
This isn't about waiting for Government timelines. It's about being proactive, building confidence with your team and proving that you're in it for the long haul.
Robert Whelan is managing director of Rockwell Financial Management

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Letters to the Editor, June 21st: On public service,  the cost of living and sunscreen
Letters to the Editor, June 21st: On public service,  the cost of living and sunscreen

Irish Times

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  • Irish Times

Letters to the Editor, June 21st: On public service, the cost of living and sunscreen

Sir, – A stream of commentary in the columns of The Irish Times has crystalised a sobering truth, that ' Our administrative and legal procedures simply cannot unblock the logjam in time to prevent serious damage ', as Michael McDowell put it. ('There is a way to break the logjam in infrastructure', June 18th). Before last Christmas, Patrick Honohan, former governor of the Central Bank, wrote in an Irish Times article: 'The issue is not so much what the aims of public policy should be... the problem has been in delivery'; and recently an Irish Times editorial spoke of our 'sluggish' administrative processes. A simple example illustrates the depth of this dysfunction: a friend of mine, an experienced property expert who spent much of his career in the public sector, repeatedly attempted to draw attention to suboptimal performance in a prominent State body (mirroring wider poor performance manifest in the ballooning housing crisis) and to offer solutions. 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Around 76 per cent of Greek Cypriots speak English, all government documents are in both languages, they drive on the left and you can keep in touch with news in English from British Forces radio or the English edition of the Cyprus Mail. Annual sunshine hours are 3,000 against 1,500 in Dublin. After 11 years in Ireland we've had enough and are planning a move. If it wasn't for the cat, we'd be there now. – Yours, etc, KENNETH HARPER, Burtonport, Co Donegal. Sir, – Eurostat's finding that Ireland is the second most expensive country in Europe came as no surprise. Donegal friends of ours recently returned from Venice, and when I asked if it had been expensive, they replied: 'Not really – after living in Ireland, Venice seemed quite reasonable.' When Venice starts to feel like a bargain, something has gone badly wrong. – Yours, etc, ENDA CULLEN, Armagh. 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Aside from geopolitical events, there is one development that I have noticed in all our local supermarkets over the past year: there has been a huge change in the way supermarket food in particular has been displayed. Now acres of plastic doors have been installed for refrigerated and frozen goods. Inside these cabinets every item of food is presented in plastic or aluminium containers and the food is then covered in literally kilometres of plastic wrap. Potatoes, carrots and even onions are in plastic bags, mushrooms, tomatoes and fruit are in plastic trays shrouded in film. Are we all paying for these plastic doors, the food containers, the cling film? I would like to know how much the packaging contributes to the increased costs. We are offered no choice on whether to accept it or not. I would also like to know whether there are any health risks to us from all the plastic. Are we going to be able to recycle all this packaging? 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It doesn't appear that the supermarkets are taking climate change seriously. – Yours, etc, MARY SIKORA, Rosscarbery, Co Cork. Child poverty is not inevitable Sir, – The latest child poverty monitor from the Children's Rights Alliance is not just a wake-up call, it's a national shame. In one year, more than 45,000 more children in Ireland have been pushed into consistent poverty, bringing the total to nearly 103,000. This is not a statistic. It is a searing indictment of political choices, public apathy, and a system that continues to fail our most vulnerable: our children. Poverty is not inevitable. It's the result of policy decisions that too often favour economic metrics over human dignity. Today, children account for nearly 40 per cent of those in consistent poverty. Thousands go to bed hungry, live in insecure housing, and miss out on the most basic joys of childhood. This, in one of the wealthiest countries in the world. 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AG says he cannot help on legal query over Shannon flights that may aid Israel's Gaza war
AG says he cannot help on legal query over Shannon flights that may aid Israel's Gaza war

Irish Times

time6 hours ago

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AG says he cannot help on legal query over Shannon flights that may aid Israel's Gaza war

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The Irish Times view on caring for older people: deserving of dignity, gratitude and respect
The Irish Times view on caring for older people: deserving of dignity, gratitude and respect

Irish Times

time6 hours ago

  • Irish Times

The Irish Times view on caring for older people: deserving of dignity, gratitude and respect

Much is rightly made of the statements of intent and idealism that characterised the foundation documents of this Republic. These included the Democratic Programme unveiled at the meeting of the first Dáil in January 1919, in which 'The Irish Republic fully realises the necessity of abolishing the present odious, degrading and foreign Poor Law System, substituting therefor a sympathetic native scheme for the care of the Nation's aged and infirm, who shall not be regarded as a burden, but rather entitled to the Nation's gratitude and consideration'. At the centre of that poor law system established under British rule was the workhouse, which was feared and detested in equal measure. While independent Irish governments subsequently sought to develop a more humane and empathetic social contract, the care of our elderly population has for far too long been compromised, sometimes egregiously. There is excessive reliance on nursing homes, a dependency more alarming given the shortcomings in Ireland's history of institutional care. There has also been a dramatic shift towards the privatisation of these homes. In the 1980s, public nursing homes accounted for roughly 60 per cent of total beds nationally, but a report from the ESRI last year highlighted that in 2022, '83 per cent of all Long-Term Residential Care (LTRC) home beds were provided by voluntary/private sector LTRC homes, with private for-profit operators alone contributing 74 per cent'. Considering the recent revelations by RTÉ Investigates, the Minister of State for Older People and Housing, Kieran O'Donnell, has said he has 'concerns' about the scale of privatisation and has ordered officials to study this issue . The Health Information and Quality Authority (HIQA) has highlighted the need to give it more power in relation to private nursing homes and their corporate owners. READ MORE The current controversies are all the more disturbing given it is 20 years since distressing images of the use of Buxton chairs to restrain elderly nursing home residents at the Leas Cross home in Dublin. A subsequent report by consultant geriatrician Desmond O'Neill described the care shortcomings at the home as 'institutional abuse'. As was often and remains the case, various concerns had been raised but it took journalistic exposé to bring matters to a head. In 2022, our population aged 65 years and over was 781,400 and is set to reach over one million by 2030. The number aged over 85 is projected to rise to 301,000 by 2051. What has been uncovered must generate an urgent dynamic to address the care of our elderly, who now, no more than when their needs were voiced by the architects of Irish independence, need to be treated with the dignity, gratitude and respect they deserve.

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