National Savings and Investments
National Savings and Investments (NS&I), formerly called the Post Office Savings Bank and National Savings, is a state-owned savings bank in the United Kingdom. It is both a non-ministerial government department[1] and an executive agency of HM Treasury.[2] The aim of NS&I has been to attract funds from individual savers in the UK for the purpose of funding the government's deficit. NS&I attracts savers through offering savings products with tax-free elements on some products, and a 100% guarantee from HM Treasury on all deposits. As of 2017, approximately 9% of the government's debt is met by funds raised through NS&I,[3] around half of which is from the Premium Bond offering.
Type | Non-ministerial government department of HM Treasury |
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Industry | Financial Services |
Founded | 1861 |
Headquarters | 16-20 Great Smith Street London, SW1P 3BT |
Key people |
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Products | Savings and Investments |
Website | www |
History
National Savings and Investments was founded by the Palmerston government (following a suggestion made by George Chetwynd, a clerk in the Money Order department of the General Post Office)[4] in 1861 as the Post Office Savings Bank, the world's first postal savings system. The aim of the bank was to allow ordinary workers a facility "to provide for themselves against adversity and ill-health", and to provide the government with access to debt funding. As an example, savings certificates were issued in the First and Second World Wars to help finance the war effort. On 1 June 1957, the Premium Bonds draws were inaugurated, using E.R.N.I.E. – the Electronic Random Number Indicator Equipment machine (now located in the Science Museum).
National Savings Bank Act 1971 | |
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Act of Parliament | |
Long title | An Act to consolidate certain enactments relating to the National Savings Bank, with amendments to give effect to recommendations of the Law Commission and the Scottish Law Commission. |
Citation | 1971 c. 29 |
Territorial extent |
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Dates | |
Royal assent | 12 May 1971 |
Commencement | 12 June 1971 |
Other legislation | |
Repeals/revokes |
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Amended by | |
Text of the National Savings Bank Act 1971 as in force today (including any amendments) within the United Kingdom, from legislation.gov.uk. |
In 1969, the bank was transferred from the Post Office to the Treasury. Its name was changed to National Savings Bank, and it gained an independent legal identity under the National Savings Bank Act 1971.[5] Despite its independence, it was used by Government in 1980 to fund a significant proportion of the public sector borrowing requirement. The then Director, Stuart Gilbert was given a target of £2 billion rising to £3.8 billion of the following three years to raise in National Savings - targets that were achieved.
The name was changed again in 2002 to National Savings and Investments.[6]
The previous graphic identity of NS&I, including the NS&I logotype, was created in 2005 by Lloyd Northover, the British design consultancy founded by John Lloyd and Jim Northover.[7] The identity was updated in 2020, however no public information has been released regarding this.
Headquarters
The Post Office Savings Bank initially operated from a room in the General Post Office building on St. Martin's Le Grand in the City of London.[8] By 1864 it had outgrown the space available there, so the Post Office took out a lease on a nearby warehouse at No. 27 St Paul's Churchyard. In the following years the business of the savings bank expanded, and further premises were acquired to the south, linked to the old warehouse by a bridge across Little Carter Lane.[8] In the 1870s, with the lease on these buildings due to expire, work began on a new purpose-built Central Post Office Savings Bank building further to the south in Queen Victoria Street. The building had five floors plus a basement; the public business of the Savings Bank was conducted on the ground floor, and the clerks had their offices on the upper floors.[9] An extension was built to the north, in Carter Lane, in 1890-94 by Sir Henry Tanner;[10] but soon afterwards work began on a new headquarters in West Kensington: Blythe House, where the Post Office Savings Bank took up residence in 1903. (The premises on Queen Victoria Street and Carter Lane became a telephone exchange; the Faraday Building now stands on the site).
The Post Office Savings Bank continued to occupy Blythe House until the early 1970s; however it was announced in 1963 that its main centre of operations would be decentralised to Glasgow. A small headquarters staff remained in London, moving to Charles House on Kensington High Street.[11]
Role
In 2017, NS&I managed around £150 billion in savings.[12] Funds from NS&I have historically been a relatively cheap source of government borrowing. NS&I sets interest rates both to attract savers and provide low-cost finance for the government, and 100% of any individual's savings are guaranteed by HM Treasury; rules are in place to ensure that it does not offer market-leading products that would stifle competition.[13]
Operations
NS&I's head office is now within the Department of Education Building, (2023) in Westminster, London; with operational sites in Blackpool, Glasgow, and Durham. However, its entire back office operation is contracted out to a French company, Atos Global IT Solutions and Services,[14] who also have staff based at the Blackpool, Glasgow and Durham sites, as well as a site in Chennai, India.
NS&I first outsourced out its operations in 1999 to Siemens Business Services; some 4,000 staff were transferred to Siemens, leaving 130 NS&I staff responsible for the design, management and marketing of products, and managing the relationship with Siemens.[15] A 2000 report by the National Audit Office stated that the contract was better value than keeping the operations in-house, and suggested other government departments could learn from the way this public-private partnership was procured and managed.[15] The Siemens business unit was acquired by Atos in 2011.[16]
In the past the bank offered many of its services through post offices, but in November 2011 it was announced that most products would only be available by telephone, online, or by post; Premium Bonds would be the only remaining product sold in post offices.[17] From 1 August 2015, NS&I stopped selling Premium Bonds through post offices, and became a purely direct business.[18]
Products
NS&I offers a wide range of savings and investment products, specialising in tax-free and income-generating products. As of December 2019 the following are offered:[19]
- Premium Bonds
- Direct ISA
- Junior ISA
- Income Bonds
- Direct Saver Account
- Investment Account
Some further products are off-sale and only available for roll-over by maturing investments:
- Index-linked Savings Certificates
- Fixed Interest Savings Certificates
- Guaranteed Growth Bonds
- Guaranteed Income Bonds
Former products
Products which are no longer available with NS&I include:
- Children's Bonds
- Children's Bonus Bonds
- Investment Guaranteed Growth Bond
- TESSA-only ISA
- Fixed-Rate Savings Bonds
- Pensioners' Bonds and Capital Bonds
- Ordinary Account/Treasurer's Account/SAYE/Yearly Plan/Deposit Bonds
- FIRST Option Bonds
- National Savings Stamps and Gift Tokens
- Easy Access Savings Account
Gallery
- From the 1860s onwards, customers would take their deposit book, such as this 1869 example, to a Post Office each time they made a transaction
- A 1921 receipt for a deposit of one shilling in the Post Office Savings Bank
- A publicity stamp from around the end of the Second World War urging investors to buy National Savings Certificates for National Reconstruction
- A National Savings Week publicity label from 1949
See also
- National Savings Movement
- National Girobank
- Rainbow Dance, Post Office Savings Bank film, 1936
- Blythe House, London, headquarters 1903–1970s
References
- "NS&I". GOV.UK. Retrieved 14 February 2014.
- "Who we are NS&I Corporate Site". Nsandi.com. 9 September 2015.
- Smith, Oliver (30 July 2018). "Doomed if interest rates go up? The UK government already spends £49 billion on debt interest". IG Markets. Retrieved 24 February 2020.
- Reports, Minutes, and Memoranda Explanatory of the Origin and Progress of the System of Post Office Savings Banks. London: HMSO. 1871. pp. 7–11.
- National Savings Bank Act 1971 UK government legislation, Retrieved 26 February 2020.
- Story of NS&I Archived 17 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine National Savings & Investments, 2013. Retrieved 10 October 2013. Archived here.
- NS&I John David Lloyd, 2013. Retrieved 10 October 2013. Archived here.
- "Savings and Savings Banks". The British Quarterly Review. LXVII: 31–47. January 1878.
- "The New Post Office Savings Bank". The London Journal. LXXI (1830): 149–150. 6 March 1880.
- Simon Bradley (ed.), Nikolaus Pevsner, London. 1. The City of London (London: Penguin Books, 1997) p. 449.
- The National Archives: Public Record Office WORK 12/716 National Savings Bank, Blythe Road, Kensington: future use of site JL Winterburn (GPO) to MM Howley (Ministry of Public Buildings and Works). 29 August 1963
- NS&I Annual Report and Accounts 2016-2017 National Savings & Investments, 2017. Retrieved 21 November 2017. Archived here.
- Gompertz, Simon (14 September 2015). "NS&I cuts interest rate for thousands of savers". BBC News.
- "National Savings and Investments (NS&I)". Atos. Retrieved 24 February 2020.
- "National Savings: Public-Private Partnership with Siemens Business Services". National Audit Office. 25 May 2000. Retrieved 24 February 2020.
- "NS&I confirms three-year contract extension with Atos". NS&I Corporate. 4 April 2019. Retrieved 24 February 2020.
- "NS&I Announces Latest Changes As Part Of Its Five Year Modernisation Programme" (PDF). NS&I. Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 February 2014. Retrieved 16 October 2012.
- "NS&I 2014-15 results – Business goes 100% direct to satisfy customer demand and maintain efficiency". NS&I.
- NS&I Our products