Pensions - Articles - Prediction of state pension age of 74 in the 2060s


Royal London's Steve Webb comments on projections by the Office for Budget Responsibility include an ‘older age’ scenario in which the state pension age rises to 74 in the 2060s and where there are over one million people aged over one hundred years old. Even on more modest assumptions published by the Department for Work and Pensions on the same day, state pension age will rise to 69 for those in their mid 30s and below

  “Our society could be completely transformed in a generation in ways that we can barely imagine and for which we are totally unprepared. It is clear that the Government has already built in an assumption of a pension age of 69 for today’s under 35s, but pension ages could rise much further and faster. A world where we cannot get a pension until we are 74 and a million people have celebrated their 100th birthday would need a total re-think of our approach to work, savings, health and care. The Government needs to do much more to give younger workers in particular a more realistic picture of what their later life could look like. The old age experiences of today’s younger workers are likely to be unrecognisable from those of their parents and grandparents. The only people who have choices about when they retire will be those who have a significant pension or other assets of their own and are therefore not dependent on the age at which state pension becomes payable”.
 
 The Government’s independent reviewer of state pension age, Sir John Cridland, is expected to publish his recommendations in March. The Government will then take account of his assessment together with the latest longevity estimates from the Government Actuary’s Department before recommending a new schedule of state pension ages. Current legislation provides for state pension age to reach 66 in 2020, 67 by 2028 and 68 by 2046. It is widely expected that the new recommendations will, for the first time, give a provisional date for state pension age to rise to at least 69, and current DWP assumptions are that this will be in the early 2050s. Under the 2015 Pension Act, a similar review has to be undertaken every five years, and an individual’s state pension age will only be finalised when they are ten years from state pension age.
  

Back to Index


Similar News to this Story

Pension scheme funding recovers in April but stays volatille
Broadstone publishes its Sirius Index April update which discloses improvements in funding for both modelled schemes. The ‘growth focused’ scheme fund
Royal London 2nd BPA transaction for Leeds Building Society
This buy-in marks Royal London’s second BPA transaction with the pension scheme of a fellow mutual and the first with a building society. Royal London
Millions face pension access cliff edge ahead of age 57 rule
Millions of pension savers born between 6 April 1971 and 5 April 1973 could face an unexpected two year wait to access their pension savings unless th

Site Search

Exact   Any  

Latest Actuarial Jobs

Actuarial Login

Email
Password
 Jobseeker    Client
Reminder Logon

APA Sponsors

Actuarial Jobs & News Feeds

Jobs RSS News RSS

WikiActuary

Be the first to contribute to our definitive actuarial reference forum. Built by actuaries for actuaries.