Archived entries for Pensions

The pensions generation

In this member post, Young Fabian member James Gill argues that it has never been more important for young people to consider savign towards their retirement.

Last Tuesday, I attended a rather eye-opening Young Fabian Future of Finance Network discussion on the issue of Pension Reform and what it means for young people. Rachel Reeves MP, Shadow Minister for Pensions, attended the roundtable.

Before the meeting, I was but another lost young soul unfamiliar with the intricacies and importance of the need for young people in today’s economic climate to become engaged in pension discussions. Now I’m a sprightful Young Fabian committed now to increasing the knowledge that young people have of pensions.

Before, the word ‘pension’ seemed distant and something associated with retirees, or with people seeking to start building for their retirement in their mid-40s. But – as we discussed at the roundtable – as job insecurity and increased living costs kick into graduate life, saving for a pension should increasingly become a habit of younger workers as well as elders.

Knowledge of pensions is more vital than ever as we lurch towards another year of stiff job competition, a sluggish economy and a squeeze on the lifestyles and choices of many low and middle income citizens in this country.

As a recent graduate in history who has been looking for job opportunities for just under two months – and who has got £23,000 worth of student debt to pay off on top of maintaining a sustainable lifestyle for a young person – I will be looking for the earliest opportunity to start saving up for a good pension for later in life.

Yet only 15% of 16-24 year olds are currently saving for pensions in comparison to 58% of workers in their 40s and 50s, with the consequence that most people in their working prime of their 30s have no or very little pension wealth. This does not bode well for the future generation of young workers, in particularly those attending university from 2012 onwards who will leave with a prospective debt of around £53,000 and with predictions of an increase in graduates competing for jobs (the current average being 80 per job).

Shifting between occupations has to be considered as well. Some people in the mid-twenties have had up to four jobs (one per year) since leaving higher education, making the ability to save towards a pension considerably more challenging compared to previous generations with greater longevity in employment with specific employers.

The need to educate our fellow young on the need for pension saving is more pressing than ever.

In a world of constrained finances, we need to save and scrimp our pennies. And while pensions may seem to many a concern only for the elderly, they are increasingly linked to broader economic issues such as whether we can remain in employment, downward pressure on wages and increases in the cost of living.

James Gill is a member of the Young Fabians.

Pensions – keeping a roof over our heads

In this member post, Daniel Wilson Craw reflects on discussions at this week’s Future of Finance event on pensions with Shadow Pensions Minister Rachel Reeves MP.

Free tertiary education. A job for life. Affordable housing. Final salary pension. All a thing of the past. The children of the baby boomer generation are looking increasingly likely to be worse off than their parents.

The Young Fabians recently considered the implications of the last of these, and how individuals entering the world of work can be encouraged to start putting money aside in a pension scheme. There was a broad consensus that better financial education was needed and the demise of the Child Trust Fund – as a way to get citizens in the habit of saving from an early – was not. The pension industry’s marketing of itself to young people was found wanting, particularly as their selling points – the tax-free nature, the employer contributions – were not familiar to some of the young professionals in the session itself.

Rachel Reeves MP noted that formulation of pensions policy involved, quite rightly, the likes of the ABI, the financial services sector and employers, but seemed to have ignored the views of the very people who it was aimed at.

While the pensions industry could be given a kick up the arse, I get the feeling a significant barrier to take-up is the effect of the economic downturn. Since 2008 there have been three trends.

Firstly people, particularly the young, have a lot less job security and are less likely to want to put money away for a long period of time when they might need some in the bank in case things take a turn for the worse.

Secondly, with the cost of borrowing pushed down, there is no incentive to save as it is difficult to find an interest rate which will beat inflation.

Thirdly, the shortcomings of the financial markets as a generator of wealth have been exposed, so that the “value of investments may fall as well as rise” warning on financial products is even more ominous for an unseasoned investor.

Talking about pensions is not enough to address the generational divide. Even if we all signed up for a pension, retirement doesn’t sound like fun. With credit still crunched and house prices still out of the reach of thirtysomethings, there are going to be a lot of people who will not own a home outright by the time they retire.

Only one in twenty over-65s currently live in the private rented sector with three quarters in owner occupation and a fifth in social housing. In comparison, 36% of 25-34-year-olds rent in the private sector. Now of course many of them will buy eventually, but the rate of those still renting when they hit 65 (or whenever we’ll retire) is going to be a lot higher than 5% the way things are going. Apparently if I continue paying £1200 into my pension pot per year and assuming it earns an average of 7% growth a year, I will get around £5000 per year in retirement. This sum would barely cover rent this year, let alone after 40 years of inflation.

Housing will have to be made a lot more affordable if the pensioners of the mid 21st century are going to keep a roof over their heads.

Dan Wilson Craw is a Young Fabian Future of Finance Network member.

The government is right to address the pensions issue

Firstly, let’s separate out two different issues relating to pensions – the pension entitlement (essentially a benefit), and public sector pensions (part of a contract between the government and its employees). The Coalition government has made proposals relating to both this week, which is likely to confuse the issue of how specific measures might decrease deficit spending/government liabilities.

Both are Pay As You Go (PAYG) schemes – where current payments are funded from the contributions of those who currently work – and both will become more difficult to fund in future years, largely for demographic reasons.

The are several problems for governments looking to tackle the issue of pensions – for example, people often don’t know the true value of their pension entitlement as it relates to a period a long way in the future; and older people are disproportionately vocal on the issue because it affects them currently, but any concessions we make to existing older generations makes it harder to rectify for future generations.

On State Pension Entitlement, the medium-term choice facing government is harsh – restrict pension entitlement to a shorter period of people’s lives (by raising the age at which the entitlement kicks in), or spread the benefits more thinly (i.e. pay less to each pensioner each week). It really is as stark as that, and the problem will get worse as the baby-boomers start retiring in this decade. (PwC did a good report on the impact to public sector debt if we don’t address this structural problem – and it would make the financial crisis look small by comparison). It is understandable in the context of better healthcare and the fact people are more active to a later stage in life that delaying the start of the benefit, rather than cutting the value of the benefit to each individual, is the preferred route.

I always thought Labour could and should have done more whilst in power to address the impending pensions crisis. I’m glad that the current government is speeding up measures announced by Labour, and thinking of going further. Linking the age at which state pensions kick in to average life expectancy – a measure which the current government is looking at – is a bold move, but one which I would support. Such a link reduces the downside financial risk to government/taxpayers of having to fund pensions over an ever increasing period of time, and ensures what limited resources are available to pensioners go further. Aligning the retirement ages of men and women is right and we should also make it easier for older people to carry on working, if they want to.

Of course, some of the problems which may occur in future in relation to state pension affordability will be directly consequence of measures they propose to introduce – in particular, the cap on non-EU economic immigrants will reduce the UK’s ability to afford pensions, for example by preserving the replacement ratio (roughly the ratio of the working age population to pensioners). This is another reason why that particular barmy proposal ought to be opposed.

As young people, it is important we contribute to the debate. After all, we are the generations which will have to fund baby boomer pension entitlements as well as face reduced entitlements ourselves. The short-sightedness (or selfishness?) of older generations isn’t a mistake we should repeat. When you add in funding our university education, environmental problems, and the massive transfer of wealth to them via housing stock, I think we are entitled to feel short-changed but it is important to address structural issues in our pension funding to avoid selling future generations down the river. (See David Willet’s book The Pinch for more on some of these intergenerational travesties).

Public sector pensions, on the other hand, are an altogether different beast.

There are a lot of arguments thrown around about public sector pensions – that they are lavish, ’gold-plated’, or act as compensation for employees who accept lower current wages than would be payable in the private sector. The truth, of course, is a little more complex.

In my own experience I know of people who have left private sector jobs to joint the public sector and who have secured higher pay, better pension entitlement and have to work a lot less for it. There is some evidence to suggest that the pay gap between private and public sector jobs has narrowed considerably over the last ten or so years, with a concurrent fall in public sector productivity. However, I think the worst excesses are mostly confined to management level positions, rather than more junior and frontline positions (nurses, firefighters etc). We should be careful not to assume that all public sector workers have it good.

In the context of a reduced number of current contributors to state pension funds (i.e. a smaller government workforce) as well as the demographic burdens of promises to older generations, it is understandable that the government want to limit the liability to the Treasury (i.e. the ‘unfunded’ bit of current pension payments). However, addressing this issue will be much harder for them than the state pension issue for a number of reasons:

  • pensions are contractual entitlements, which would make it hard for the government to change already committed entitlements (which means they are unlikely to reduce current pension costs);
  • changing pension benefits for new employees (for example, switching to average salary schemes) would not have a direct benefit to the public finances until those workers retire – possibly several decades;
  • trade unions are likely to oppose any material changes to existing workers, and possibly new workers.

Making existing members of pensions schemes increase their payments into the scheme would be challenging, but probably the least worse option. Likewise, it might be possible to reduce the entitlement existing members accrue in future. Both are likely to meet strong opposition.

The tribal response to the appointment of John Hutton to chair a review into into public sector pensions was incredibly disappointing, and trivialises a very serious issue for the UK. It is likely we will need cross-party support for any measures to make public sector pensions affordable. Labour should be at the heart of those debates and contributing to the development of policy on those issues. Far from being deriding him for being a “traitor”, Labour should welcome Hutton’s appointment and make the most of his involvement.

After all, we can’t afford not to.



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