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Proposed pension reforms from the Institute for Fiscal Studies, in partnership with the abrdn Financial Fairness Trust, aim to shape a pension system that works better for future generations. The recommendations have been published ahead of the government's upcoming review into retirement adequacy.
The reforms outlined in the IFS report, The Pensions Review: final recommendations, would provide a secure State Pension, increase the number of workers saving into private pensions, help those hit hardest by the rises in State Pension age, and help people to manage their pension wealth throughout their retirement.
The IFS highlighted serious problems which remain for the next generation of pensioners, despite significant improvements in recent years. These are largely the result of most workers no longer saving into defined benefit pension schemes, which pay a specific amount at retirement based on the wage you were earning when you retired, along with lower levels of home ownership. The review identified several issues that need addressing:
There are various recommendations to make the necessary changes to the UK's pension system, and they would work across the entire landscape. One of the key measures is a four-
The first would be to target a level of the new State Pension "as a fraction of economy-
The second is that the State Pension should always grow as fast as inflation, if earnings growth is below it. The IFS report stated: "This would temporarily cause the state pension to be above target. As is done in Australia, the state pension would then continue to rise in line with inflation until it returns to target."
The third is that the Government should commit to never means-
Private pension savings are currently not sufficient for most people to reach a retirement that they will enjoy comfortably. In fact, 20% of private sector employees and 80% of self-
Even those who are saving will usually be saving into a defined contribution pension, with around 40% set to miss the standard benchmark for retirement income as the amount they will receive is based entirely on the investment performance of the pension fund. Also, many people are struggling on lower incomes so the IFS recommends avoiding the default automatic enrolment into a pension as it would mean those people have less money to take home.
Instead, it recommends removing the requirement for any employee aged 16-
To ensure those on lower earnings don't lose too much of their monthly income, the IFS also proposes increasing the minimum default total pension contributions under automatic enrolment. It also recommends integrating pension contributions into Self-
The report stated: "The proposals boosting pension contributions from employers and employees would generate an additional £11 billion per year of private pension saving (£5 billion from employer contributions and £6 billion from employee contributions). Those on course for low-
There are further measures suggested in the report, which can be read in full on the IFS website: The Pensions Review: final recommendations.
If you are keen to find out more about how you can improve your pension savings or help your employees with theirs, then please contact us on 01709 327 215 or email info@branagans.co.uk and we will do everything we can to assist you.