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Auto-enrolmentLatest NewsPay & benefitsPensions

Pensions dark age to hit the UK

by John Charlton 2 Dec 2009
by John Charlton 2 Dec 2009

The UK is heading for a pensions dark age, according to insurance company AXA.

It said that 64% of UK workers are “looking to rely on” the state pension â€“ currently £95.25 for a single person â€“ when they retire, thanks partly to a decline in occupational scheme membership.

One in five 25- to 34-year-olds believe equity in their house will support them in their retirement. But only 7% of 18 to 24-year-olds share this view.

The figures are based on a poll of 2,110 adults carried out on behalf of AXA by pollster YouGov last month.

AXA’s head of savings and pensions policy, Steve Folkard, said: “There has to be a co-ordinated effort to make sure that people are adequately provided for, or we will be faced with a pensions dark age.”

According to the company, the UK state pension is worth 31% of average earnings and trails behind other major developed countries. For example, the Italian state pension, the most generous, is 68% of average earnings. France’s is 51.2%, Germany’s 39.9%, and the US 41.2%.

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AXA also cast doubt on whether auto-enrolment, due to start in 2012, will bring millions more people â€“ the Pensions Policy Institute estimate is 10 million â€“ into occupational pension schemes. It believes “there could be a rise of just 800,000 members” contributing to defined contribution schemes.

“The erosion of the once sound company pensions infrastructure in the UK… presents a future government with a massive challenge. Pensioner poverty is set to grow dramatically over the coming years, and current reform measures will take years to implement.”

John Charlton

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