Tag Archives: triple-lock

Pensions set for 18 per cent increase after being omitted from Sunak’s summer statement – or are they?

Chancellor Rishi Sunak dodged a major headache in his summer statement – failing to address a burning issue affecting pensions.

He has a choice between giving senior citizens a massive increase in their pensions next year, or breaking a long-standing promise to them.

Here’s the problem, according to the Mirror:

Current rules mean the Government will need to find enough money to raise the state pension by an estimated 18.3% when we can least afford it.

It’s because of an old promise to make sure pensions rise by at least as much as average earnings each year.

Earnings have collapsed in 2020 thanks to a combination of the furlough scheme, lockdown and pay cuts – and that means next year average wages will look like they’ve rocketed and pensions will have to rise despite never having fallen.

The Government’s needs to choose between breaking a promise to pensioners, or handing them huge increases because working Brits lost money.

Sunak didn’t say a word about pensions in his statement – he ignored the issue completely.

But the problem won’t go away and he will have to decide soon whether to blow a huge hole in the pension fund – or upset a huge swathe of mostly Tory voters.

This Writer is willing to bet he’ll upset the oldies – because there won’t be a general election for four years and he’ll expect them to have forgotten or died by then. That’s the usual rationale.

Source: Three glaring omissions from Rishi Sunak’s mini Budget – young mums, pensions and renters – Mirror Online

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Are the Tories signing the death warrants of expat pensioners?

Pensioners living in EU countries could be facing double jeopardy if the UK leaves the EU without a withdrawal agreement, as the Conservatives seem to be planning.

Not only are they likely to lose the “triple lock” system to ensure their pensions rise every year, but those with complex health needs are likely to lose their NHS-supported healthcare.

The EU has repeatedly stated that nothing is agreed until everything is agreed – and nothing has been agreed at the moment. So the triple-lock – ensuring that the UK state pension rises with the rate of inflation, earnings, or at the rate of 2.5 per cent, whichever is higher – and payments from the UK to an EU bank account may be at risk.

There are concerns that this would end with Brexit, meaning pensions for expat Brits would be frozen and they would become poorer in real terms every year.

The DWP has claimed that it is committed to uprating pensions across the EU in 2019 and 2020. After that, it seems, if you’re a pensioner in the EU, you’ll be living on the same money for the rest of your natural life.

UPDATE: I am grateful to commenters (see below) who have pointed out what may be inaccurate information in the original version of this article. I wrote that a commenter on the Vox Political Facebook page pointed out, “There are many British pensioners with complex health needs living in the EU, whose health conditions are supported in their countries of residence under the EHIC [European Health Insurance Card].

“On October 31, if no deal goes through, those people are going to lose their health care. That means they’re either going to have to buy expensive insurance in their countries of residence, bring their health burdens home to the NHS, or die.

“Many of them will die because they have complex health needs and won’t be able to just up-sticks and return to the UK.”

It seems that EHIC is only valid for two years and if a UK citizen is a permanent resident of an EU country, they must sign on for that country’s healthcare scheme, in whatever form it takes.

This means they could still be out of pocket as these schemes cost money. With pensions frozen – and the value of the pound plummeting to a point where some expats are already encountering difficulties – matters could become much worse, very quickly.

Boris Johnson doesn’t seem to care.

So it seems the government could be literally signing UK residents’ death warrants.

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Lords say pensioners should lose extra benefits because they aren’t in poverty. Really?

According to a House of Lords committee, extra benefits for pensioners are no longer necessary because hardly any pensioners are in poverty any more.

But is that really true?

Poverty is a relative measure. In the UK, the poverty line is set at 60 per cent of average earnings – and average earnings have been plummeting because of Tory policies that funnel money to people who are already very rich.

So, for example, the proposal to remove the triple lock for State Pensions and instead uprate the State Pension in line with average earnings is in fact an attempt to plunge pensioners back into poverty.

And the claim that cash being spent on pensioner benefits would be better-used on helping young people is a false argument. There is plenty of money available to do both; all the government has to do is tax the super-rich a little more.

Pensioner benefits for over-75’s should be cut or axed to help restore fairness in the system between older and younger people, the House of Lords Committee on Intergenerational Fairness and Provision has said.

The Committee argues that social security payments and passported benefits are no longer required because the issue of pensioner poverty has been all but resolved.

Source: Cut pensioner benefits to improve fairness, says Lords committee


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The great pensions rip-off

Someone's raiding the pensions piggy-bank: Government changes mean the rich will be subsidised by the poor.

Someone’s raiding the pensions piggy-bank: Government changes mean the rich will be subsidised by the poor. [Picture: The Guardian]

We all know that pensioners have a charmed life under the current government – right? Pensions take up around half the £160 billion social security budget and there are other perks like the cold weather payment during the winter months, free bus passes and free TV licences – right?

They get a triple-lock inflation guarantee, under which the state pension rises according to the highest of CPI inflation, the rise in earnings or 2.5 per cent. They get Pension Credit (otherwise known as the Minimum Income Guarantee) to ensure they receive a weekly minimum of more than £140.

So no matter what happens to the rest of us, they’re in clover – right?

Not really.

Just taking those examples, Tory Liam Fox wants to cut the cold weather payment down to nothing, and the Liberal Democrat Vince Cable wants to means-test or tax pensions. The free TV licence will disappear if the rising clamour to privatise the BBC receives government blessing.

Then there’s the fact that the age at which we can start drawing our pensions is rising – from 65 (for men) and 60 (for women) in 2010 to 68 (for both) by 2046, which may seem a long way into the future but in fact affects people from 2016 onwards.

The government is bringing this in because people are living longer, and this may seem like a reasonable idea – until one takes into account the fact that life expectancy is hugely dependant not only on where you live but on your social class as well.

For example, in Kensington and Chelsea, average male life expectancy in 2010 was 85.1 years, and average female life expectancy was 89.8 years. In Glasgow at the same time, average male life expectancy was 71.6 years – 13.5 less than men in Kensington and Chelsea – and average female life expectancy was 78 years – 11.8 years lower than in Kensington and Chelsea.

Between 2004 and 2010 the gap in life expectancy between the two places increased by one year and 1.7 years for men and women respectively, indicating that health inequalities across the UK are increasing.

Social class also has a huge effect on life expectancy, with people in higher managerial and professional occupations likely to live 3.5 years longer than those in routine occupations.

But they all pay National Insurance contributions for the same period of time – 30 years – in order to qualify for the state pension. This means working class people living in social housing are likely to be paying towards the pensions of upper-middle class professionals in penthouses, as well as their own.

Now the government is introducing the flat-rate pension for people reaching the state pension age who have made 35 years’ National Insurance contributions. The payment will be £144 per week at today’s prices.

People who have built up large savings for their retirement will be considerably better-off because pensions will no longer be means-tested (Pension Credit will be phased out).

Existing pensioners will remain in the old system and are likely to be worse-off than those who qualify for the new pension.

People aged in their 20s at the moment may also be worse-off than under the current system (so, even with pensions, the Coalition government has found a way to attack the young).

And people who have not paid National Insurance for at least seven years in total will not qualify for the new single-tier state pension at all.

Workers who belong to contracted-out final salary schemes pay lower NI contributions at present, but these will rise after 2016. Public sector workers in such schemes will have to pay more.

The couple’s pension rate, which is lower than the individual rate, is being phased out. This means around 30,000 women due to retire in and around 2016 are expected to lose out, as they were relying on their husband’s NI record for a state pension income and will no longer be entitled to it.

We already knew all of that.

Now, the National Federation of Occupational Pensioners says the government is proposing changes to workplace pension schemes that will undermine benefits, increase pension poverty and widen the gap between the private sector and public sector schemes, according to Mature Times.

The proposed changes mean companies will be allowed to change their scheme rules to remove the inflation link for pensions, increase their pension age and get rid of other benefits such as pensions for spouses. This significant downgrade of pension provision means scheme members could reach retirement and then realise that the expected return from their pensions has been severely reduced.

Put it all together and the less wealthy are being subjected to another rip-off – this one delayed until retirement. Who knows how much energy bills will cost by then? How many of us will have rent to pay, or mortgage payments to complete? How much will the weekly groceries cost? Will the equivalent of £144 per week be enough, by then?

And – in the current cutthroat times – how many of us will survive to find out?