DISCUSSION PAPER PI-0509
Towards a ‘balanced’ approach to pensions reform? Individuals,
the
state and employers in the restructuring of post-retirement income
in the UK
Paul Bridgen and Traute Meyer
ABSTRACT
This paper tests the feasibility of individual saving as a solution to the
pensions
crisis and, heeding the Pensions Commission’s call for a ‘balanced’
approach to
the UK’s problems, investigates the effect on individual savings rates
of changes
in state and occupational provision: ie the re-introduction of the Basic State
Pension
earnings link and a return to an average pension contribution of 8 % for those
employers currently providing occupational pensions. The paper is based on
a
series of micro-simulations of the pension entitlements of a selection of
illustrative
‘risk biographies’, which are founded upon a critique of similar
calculations undertaken
by the DWP and Pensions Commission.
The paper shows that:
1. The introduction of typical risks (eg care responsibilities, unemployment,
early
retirement) to individual life biographies, and the use of an adequacy standard
based
on relative poverty, significantly increases the rate of saving required to
secure an
adequate income in retirement in comparison with the savings rates outlined
by the
DWP and Pensions Commission.
2. A relatively small change in the current policies of the state and some
employers has
the potential to make the prospect of an increased reliance on individual
savings a
more feasible prospect.
3. Greater intervention by the state and/or employers would nevertheless be
required to
cater for those with greater periods out of the workforce and/or working in
sectors
uncovered by occupational provision.
