29 July 2021
Matching dashboard users to their pension records
One of the thorniest issues for pensions dashboards is how to safely match individuals logging in to their pensions held by schemes. Collaborative work is needed to help solve this in a consumer-acceptable way.
Every pension scheme and provider will need to decide what particular combination of personal data items it’s best for them to match on (such as Surname, Date of Birth, Address, National Insurance Number, etc.).
If they set their match criteria bar too high, though, they risk pensions not being found for the user to view on a dashboard. Setting it too low potentially risks the wrong pensions being returned to the user to view.
So schemes are looking for industry-wide conventions, which they can adopt, that strike an appropriate balance between the sensitivity and specificity of matching (see the new PLSA Thought Leadership report).
Industry-wide data matching conventions (DMCs)
What’s critical is that any industry data matching conventions (DMCs) developed must be adoptable right across the entire pensions universe: state pension, public service schemes, private sector schemes (both in-house and third-party administered), master trusts and all types of commercial pension/buy-out providers.
A saver could have pensions with all of these different types of pension organisations, so there needs to be a parity of data matching right across all the different sub-sectors of our very diverse pensions industry.
PASA working together with industry, regulatory and technology organisations
This need for matching parity has led the Pensions Administration Standards Association (PASA) to bring together the Pensions and Lifetime Saving Association (PLSA) and the Association of British Insurers (ABI) to devise solutions.
We will build on existing data matching approaches, align thinking with the small pots co-ordination group, and ensure industry-wide adoptability.
We are also already engaging with the regulators (The Pensions Regulator and the Financial Conduct Authority) to help ensure the DMC thinking aligns with their emerging regimes for dashboards regulation.
The data matching conventions must also work in practice, so we’re liaising closely with 11 leading providers of pensions administration software. They can then implement the different industry matching conventions, for their different trustee and other clients to choose from to be used on their schemes.
It’s important to state, though, that the standard DMCs won’t solve the matching challenge on their own. As well as adopting an appropriate DMC, trustees will need to work with their suppliers to implement (or build on existing) technology/data cleansing solutions which, in combination, will help to improve matches.
Alpha / Beta testing and next steps
Yesterday, the Pensions Dashboards Programme (PDP) announced the names of the seven Alpha data providers. These Alpha organisations will connect to the pensions dashboards ecosystem from late 2021. So we’re aiming to have the initial DMCs ready in time for the Alphas to test in early 2022, with refinements from that testing. By the end of Alpha, a suite of industry DMCs will be ready for Beta testers to adopt.
Beta testing data providers will deliver further extensive testing later into 2022, with further refinements to the DMCs. By the end of the Beta testing phase, the finalised suite of industry-wide DMCs should be ready for schemes and providers to select from (unless they wish to build their own scheme-specific matching).
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