That’s the prediction of Michael Johnson from the Centre for
Policy Studies. If that’s what the Centre would do, I’d retire them now!
Pensions get a lot of bad press and Johnson seems to be
saying that not only will this continue (seemingly helped by his headlines in
the Daly Telegraph: “Pensions will not exist by 2050”) but that youngsters will
not invest in something so far into the future.
So far so old hat. It’s been the problem for as long as
there has been a pension plan to join- we don’t think we will get old. We don’t
think we can afford it, so put off the day. I remember presenting to some DJ’s
at Kiss FM- talk about not accepting they were going to get old!
Johnson says that
young people today should only invest in workplace pensions if their employer
is making “sizeable” contributions and if they are 40 per cent taxpayers,
meaning they get more tax relief. He says that if this is not the case then it
is “almost certainly not worthwhile” for young people to save into a pension
scheme. In the meantime, Johnson points to ISAs as the preferred investment.
With friends like
Michael Johnson, who needs enemies? What a load of old…. retirement talk. The
Auto-Enrolment of members of pension plans is good news. It means more will
invest and more people will have more in old age. Of course there are problems to solve (annuities for example). And the pension may not be at levels akin
to previous defined benefit plans, but it’s still a pension; an income in later
years with tax benefits along the way, including tax free cash.
Longer term than
ISAs and ensuring there is something there to make the final years good years,
pensions are here to stay.
The term ‘retirement’
may fade away as people take part time jobs, live healthier longer and manage
their life balance – but that’s another discussion entirely.
This is just sad and scares me. I mean, isn't that what we are working foe almost half of our lives? To be able to relax with the money we've worked hard for?
ReplyDeleteBest,
Mischna Ong