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The end of pensions as
we know them? Employers are pulling out Pension
contributions falling now, retirement will be taken
away next.
by Dr. Ros
Altmann
(All material on this
page is subject to copyright and must not be
reproduced without the author's
permission.)
8th April 2009
Aon has just announced it wants to cut its standard
pension contributions to stay 'ahead of the
curve'. This has huge significance because Aon
is a company which advises other employers on their
pension arrangements. It is clearly signalling a
loss of faith in pensions and a preference for
cutting pensions over other forms of cost-cutting.
This is the thin end of the wedge. Aon closed its
final salary scheme in 1999, and cut contributions
by moving new workers into money purchase
arrangement. Now it wants to cut contributions
again. Final salary scheme employer contributions
are around 20%, money purchase contributions are
under 10% and now Aon is cutting back to 6% for
everyone as standard.
This is little different from a pay cut, except it
is a cut in 'deferred pay' rather than
today's pay, so people may feel it less
forcefully. But we will all feel the effects in
future.
Today's announcement looks like the start of the
next phase of employer withdrawal from pension
provision. In fact, Government policy is encouraging
the trend still further. From 2012, its proposed
'personal accounts' will only require
employers to contribute 3%. I have consistently
warned about the 'levelling down' this will
entail, as employers use the opportunity to cut
pension contributions to the minimum
'official' 3% level.
The result will be millions more pensioners in
poverty, which will undermine future economic growth
and leave a legacy of misery for new retirees.
The problem is more acute for the UK because our
state pension is so inadequate. We have just about
the lowest state pension of any developed country
and Governments over the years have relied on good
private pensions to supplement the low national
insurance payments.
In fact, the state pension has been cut continuously
over the years on the assumption that employer
pensions or private personal pensions would invest
in the stock market and deliver sufficient extra
income in retirement. This hasn't worked!
Final salary schemes were relied on at first, but
employers have found the costs and risks too high.
Personal pensions were supposed to provide generous
payments to those who invested in the stock market,
but we have now learned that the costs and risks of
those are too high as well.
As employers pull out of pension provision, workers
are on their own, coping with the risks and costs of
providing for their future, without the means to do
so.
Meanwhile, of course, policymakers seem totally
oblivious to what is going on. They have their own,
guaranteed, taxpayer funded, recession proof
pensions - perhaps that has meant they do not
recognise what is happening in the rest of the
country.
We cannot go on as we are. If private pensions
wither on the vine, more people will be in poverty,
state means-tested benefits will mushroom and the UK
economy will remain in trouble.
The inevitable consequence of the credit crisis and
employers cutting pension contributions is that
people will have to work longer - whether they like
it or not. So at the moment we are focussing on
disappearing pensions, soon we will be looking at
disappearing retirement!
Dr. Ros Altmann
07799 404747
ENDS
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