As people across the country urge their local MPs to battle for a better state pension‚ we have unveiled our own ‘White Paper on Pensions’ to secure a decent income for future and current pensioners.
Published today‚ the paper is the result of a series of mini Citizens' Juries on pensions (1) and sets out our affordable recommendations for reform. Hundreds of participants from all walks of life took part in our National Pensions Debate and were unanimous in their condemnation of the system’s failings. Younger and older people agreed that radical reform is now urgently needed to lift today’s 1.8 million pensioners out of poverty and prevent future generations from facing the same fate.
We have welcomed the Pensions Commission’s recommendations for pensions reform‚ but are warning that its proposals represent the very minimum that should be done. Implementing anything less than the full package of reforms would result in higher pensioner poverty‚ more means-testing and could undermine any new national pensions saving scheme.
We support the Commission’s approach of a more generous state system‚ the need to improve the system for carers and other low income groups‚ and improved opportunities for private savings‚ but we urge the Government not to forget today’s pensioners while reforming the system for tomorrow’s.
So what are our main recommendations for reform?
1. Government should provide a better Basic State Pension (BSP) by improving coverage and relinking it to earnings‚ paid for in part by an increase in State Pension Age (SPA).
2. Auto-enrolment of workers into a National Pensions and Savings Scheme (NPSS) which would be run at a much lower cost than existing Stakeholder Pensions.
3. Continued government efforts to tackle pensioner poverty.
4. Cross-government approach to extending working lives.
5. Ongoing independent Pensions Advisory Commission.
Without decisive Government action‚ public faith in pensions will remain low‚ the current savings crisis will spiral out of control and the value of the Basic State Pension will continue to decline. We are warning the Government not to waste this once-in-a-generation opportunity to radically reform the pensions system.
Age Concern’s Director-General‚ Gordon Lishman‚ said:
“The national debate around Lord Turner’s proposals has made it clear that there is a solid public consensus for radical reforms‚ so long as changes are seen to be fair. The vast scale of the challenge is now widely agreed. Not only do we need to improve the prospects of the 10 million people who are not saving enough for their retirement‚ we need to tackle the poverty faced by 1.8 million of today’s pensioners.
“We believe the package of reforms put forward in our White Paper would boost voluntary saving‚ create a fair system for men and women and protect the poorest pensioners. But the ball is now in the Government’s court - the time has come to commit to bold reform of the pensions system.”
Notes to editors
(1) In July 2005‚ Age Concern organised a three-day Citizen’s Jury in Sheffield attended by a nationally representative group. It was a unique event that brought together 18 ordinary people‚ with no professional knowledge of pensions‚ to hear evidence from key witnesses and debate the main issues around pensions reform. Following the success of this event‚ Age Concerns across the country have organised 40 shorter consultation events involving approx. 1‚000 people. These mini Citizens’ Juries have been taking place since January 2006 and are set to continue until June 2006. Local MPs have been invited along to each event to hear the recommendations of the participants.