Previous Page  21 / 40 Next Page
Information
Show Menu
Previous Page 21 / 40 Next Page
Page Background

faced with the obligation to increase

their contributions fromApril 2018.

4

Moreover, there’s an overwhelming

tendency for scheme members of all

ages to remain invested in the default

pension fund on offer, whereas choosing

a slightly riskier alternative might

provide significantly better long-term

returns.

5

So getting people to think

more about their pension pots is crucial

to encourage them to think about

retirement, and how much money

they will realistically need to get by,

while also making informed choices

about how they invest.

Automatic enrolment was complicated

by the introduction inApril of the

Lifetime ISA (LISA), which can be used

to save either for a deposit on a first

home or for retirement.While that

flexibility may be attractive to younger

people keen to get a foot on the housing

ladder, the risk is that they will opt out

of their employer’s pension for the sake

of a LISA.That would mean losing out

on the employer’s contribution.

Meanwhile, the government is sending

distinctly mixed messages to more

established pension investors, with

a series of reductions to the lifetime

allowance – the overall amount of

pension savings that you can have at

retirement. It has been cut repeatedly

over recent years, from £1.8 million in

2011/12 to £1 million inApril 2016.

Because the lifetime allowance applies

to both contributions and investment

growth, these reductions, illogically,

penalise successful investors whose

funds have prospered.And it is not as if

today a £1 million pot actually yields

a particularly generous annual income:

a fund of this size would produce an

index-linked secure income of just

£23,600 as at May 2017.

6

Most recently, the amount that can

be contributed to a pension once it

has been accessed flexibly – the so-called

‘money purchase annual allowance’ –

has been slashed from £10,000 to

£4,000.While the aim was to prevent

people withdrawing money and then

reinvesting it with further tax relief, in

practice this reduction also hits those

who, for whatever reason, needed to use

their pension pot but subsequently had

an opportunity to build it back up again

from their earnings.

The pension system’s tax breaks are

an easy target for a cash-strapped

government – but its persistent

tinkering works against its own message

that we all need to make provision for

our retirement. Nonetheless, the bottom

line is: that is exactly what we must do.

Faith Glasgow is Editor of

Money Observer

RETIREMENT

The government’s

persistent tinkering

works against its own

message that we all

need to make provision

for our retirement

Getty Images. Sources: 1 The Pensions Regulator,April 2016-March 2017’, July 2017; 2, 4 ScottishWidows, ‘Retirement Report 2017’, June 2017; 3 ‘Royal London Policy Paper 2.The Death of Retirement’, February 2016; 5 Decision Technology, ‘Damage by Default:The Flaw in Pensions Auto

Enrolment’,April 2017; 6 Money Advice Service comparison for an individual retiring at 65 providing a 66% spouse’s pension on death assuming no guarantee on the pension and the spouse is 3 years younger than the member, along with the pension increasing with RPI inflation, May 2017

THE INVESTOR

|

21