HRreview 20 Years
This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Subscribe for weekday HR news, opinion and advice.
This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is hidden when viewing the form
Optin_date
This field is hidden when viewing the form

GP pension rules classed as discriminatory

-

Rules governing the ability of partners of GPs to inherit their pension amount to gender discrimination, the British Medical Asociation (BMA) has claimed.

Under the current system, if a male GP dies his widow will receive his pension entitlement based on all contributions made up to the point.

However, when a female GP leaves a widower, he will only be able to recieve payments based on contributions made after 1988.

This week, a judicial hearing, brought by the BMA, has begun in an attempt to solve the issue.

HRreview Logo

Get our essential weekday HR news and updates.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Keep up with the latest in HR...
This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is hidden when viewing the form
Optin_date
This field is hidden when viewing the form

 

At the centre of the case is Iain Cockburn, the widower of GP Dr Clare Boothroyd.

A widow in Mr Cockburn’s situation would receive £3,200 more in annual pension payments than he currently receives.

Writing in a blog post, BMA head of pensions Andy Blake said that the result of the case could have “potentially huge implications”, both for the NHS and other public sector pension schemes.

“A legal victory would also make it hard to justify the application of this regulation to unmarried partners including civil partners, to whom the pre-1988 rules also apply,” Mr Blake said.

Meanwhile, the health secretary Andrew Lansley argues that it would be too costly to government finances to correct the problem, with estimates suggesting it would cost around £4 billion to eliminate the discrimination across all public sector pension schemes.

This is despite Alex Fox, one of the solicitors representing the BMA, revealing this week that the health secretary aknowledges that the current system is discriminatory.

Speaking to GPonline.com, Mr Fox said Mr Lansley has “accepted that this is direct discrimination”.

However he added that this does not necessarily mean that the government will lose the case if it can prove it still has a good cause not to let any changes in the legislation go ahead.

“The government “may still allow the act of discrimination to continue where it can justify that act,” said Mr Fox.

Latest news

Felicia Williams: Why ‘shadow work’ is quietly breaking your people strategy

Employees are losing seven hours a week to tasks that fall outside their core job description. For HR leaders, that’s the kind of stat that keeps you up at night.

Redundancies rise as 327,000 job losses forecast for 2026

UK job losses are set to rise again as redundancy warnings hit post-pandemic highs, with employers cutting roles amid rising costs and economic pressure.

Rise of ‘sickfluencers’ and AI advice sparks concern over attitudes to work

Online influencers and AI tools are shaping how people approach illness and employment, heaping pressure on employers.

‘Silent killer’ dust linked to 500 construction deaths a year as 600,000 workers face exposure

Hundreds of UK construction workers die each year from silica dust exposure as a new campaign calls for stronger workplace protections.
- Advertisement -

Leaders ‘overestimate’ how much workers use AI

Firms may be misreading workforce readiness for artificial intelligence, as frontline staff report far lower day-to-day adoption than executives expect.

Cost-of-living pressures ‘keep unhappy workers in their jobs’

Many say economic pressures are forcing them to remain in jobs they would otherwise leave, as pay and financial stability dominate career decisions.

Must read

Additional Paternity Leave: How will you manage the Change?

From April 2011, fathers will have the right to...

Mark Eltringham: The greatest challenge for the modern workplace is how to engineer serendipity

It’s not often that workplace management becomes national news...
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you