Viewing 40 posts - 41 through 80 (of 143 total)
  • Raise in state pension age
  • bikebouy
    Free Member

    Drac – Moderator

    Or they will vote for party that looks after people and will change it to 65 again.

    I do hope so, but I doubt it. I fear that now this is in, it’ll stay in forever. Such as the political system for funding anything is less of a balance and more of political points scoring.

    The reason I posted about a reduction in retirement age is a simple one. With more Oldies not working, potential for Childcare goes up (I did say Potential for a reason) thereby saving Family cost pressures. Also those that have chosen a Manual Job over the years are pretty much worn out by retirement (huge assumption) I know about the Funding side, I’m quite aware of that.

    So, what will happen about those that release Pensions before maturity? We know thats already happening and the need to buy an Annuity is doomed, so are Mums n Dads really helping out siblings or buying Merc 4×4’s and off on a River Cruise?

    tthew
    Full Member

    We need a nice war or some disease to decrease the population a bit and reduce the future pension bill.

    That’s be perverse, as then there would be less paying into ‘the pot’, (there is no pot, it just comes straight out of taxation) to fund all the coffin dodgers who are still taking out.

    P-Jay’s flu pandemic has more chance of succeeding.

    Kryton57
    Full Member

    Another years work for me, now 23 years to go.

    I’m **** off with this county and the **** conservatives. I’m now focusing on plan to get the family out of here to somewhere less miserable looking going forward when the time is right.

    convert
    Full Member

    That’s be perverse, as then there would be less paying into ‘the pot’, (there is no pot, it just comes straight out of taxation) to fund all the coffin dodgers who are still taking out.
    P-Jay’s flu pandemic has more chance of succeeding.

    So hypothetically if you had a chance of retiring on a full pension at 60 but to get that deal you had to sign up to euthanasia at 80 if you were still around would you take it? Clear the dead wood so to speak for a few more years released from the drudge of work whilst still fit and well enough to do something good with the time. Got to confess I might go for it.

    ransos
    Free Member

    Another years work for me, now 23 years to go.

    Theoretically, I avoided it by being born two weeks too late. In reality, I suspect binners is right: it will keep going up for all of us. I’ll keep paying off the mortgage and paying into my company scheme, in the hope that I can retire early and manage without a state pension for a few years.

    bikebouy
    Free Member

    I want the choice to a dignified death. I’m all for voluntary euthanasia, we as humans should accept once quality of life is diminished, we should have the choice to die.

    teamhurtmore
    Free Member

    No surprises here – well flagged years in advance

    Public sector pensions are essentially an unsustainable Ponzi scheme

    => The state pension is unfit for purpose

    People have been given the wrong advice for too long, Rely on the state and you are screwed in old age.

    jambalaya
    Free Member

    If only there was another DUP magic money tree.

    £1bn vs £74bn

    We don’t save enough / pay enough National Insurance for the pensions it seems we want. Either pay more or get less. As teamhurtmore says.

    @Kryton they have much more generous pensions in France which are related to your income during your working life, their taxes are much much higher.

    Harry_the_Spider
    Full Member

    My mother in law has been whinging about the Tories… yet she voted for them.

    I just don’t get it.

    donncha
    Full Member

    Apparently the plan is to bring it inline with Sudan model:
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Retirement_age

    binners
    Full Member

    I want the choice to a dignified death. I’m all for voluntary euthanasia, we as humans should accept once quality of life is diminished, we should have the choice to die.

    I’m like some kind of visionary…. I started planning for this eventuality in my teens. ramped it up in my twenties and thirties, and reached a stage of permanent kebab-laden shiraz-pickledness in my 40’s.

    pissing myself in some grim subsistence level hell of a ‘retirement’ isn’t an option my poor abused body is ever likely to deliver. On reflection…. I win! 😀

    Actually… I’ll probably be that genetic freak who smoked 40 woodbines a day, and necked 12 pints on the way back from work every evening, yet lived to 107. Bah! 😥

    binners
    Full Member

    My mother in law has been whinging about the Tories… yet she voted for them.

    You just wait till the full impact of Brexit hits home.

    The gilded generation who voted for it will be wailing from their triple-locked, index-linked, inflation+ ivory towers like low flying Hercules

    stumpyjon
    Full Member

    Glad you lot all listened properly to what’s been said today. Nothing has changed, the Tories have expressed an aspiration to change the retirement age but don’t plan to do it until 2023 when the next pension age review is due. To do it today requires a change in the law and if they tried to push that through today they’d get their backsides handed to them on a plate.

    Meanwhile back in the real world Binners is probably right, pension ages will continue to go up as pension costs increase and the welfare pot is squeezed by increasing health and social care costs which will also increase with life expectancy and improvements in medicine. Bear in mind despite the current crisis in social care for the elderly only around 20% of those needing care get it paid for by the state. The rest pay themselves, rely on friends and family for support or suffer with no support. If we have a crisis now think what it will be like when the state needs to pick 40% of the costs. Our welfare expectations (and expectations around inheritance) for the future are deluded.

    funkmasterp
    Full Member

    This needs a radical solution. I propose retiring in your thirties. Seems like the best decade of life for fitness versus experience. Have ten to fifteen years of relaxing and enjoying life. Once you hit forty five it’s back to work until you die on the job.

    TheBrick
    Free Member

    You don’t have to do the same job at 65 as you would at 45.
    You probably will not have the same responsibilitys and requirements at 65 as you do at 45.

    I think there should be a partial pension age at which you can claim a % of your pension 0-100%. This can allow people to go part time. But if they wish to defer the pension there is a increase in pension a
    When you do claim. This allow for flexibility of people life’s and situation

    thestabiliser
    Free Member

    Soylent green people, anyone had a Holland’s pie lately?

    one_happy_hippy
    Free Member

    According to the BBC calculations I should be saving £404/month for my pension. Which would be fine if I don’t want to say, eat or in fact do anything other than pay my bills and mortgage…

    chestercopperpot
    Free Member

    @binners – That’s the problem there are going to be people as there are now who need constant medical care and cannot work even if they wanted to. Some people are in a really bad state before the current retirement age never mind any older.

    The governments plan (doesn’t seem to matter who’s in power) is to up the pension age in perpetuity. Think it was every ten years or so, can’t remember exactly. It was a published plan to be instigated across Europe from what I remember, effectively designing state pensions out within a few generations. Stealth privatise the NHS piece by piece, cut all social security payments, in combination with dwindling incomes for the majority and old age is going to get really ugly for those (most of us) without considerable means or who were fortunate enough to benefit from investments, which will seem like decadent luxuries in the not too distant future.

    But heyhoo as long as we get fast braodband, social media, free streaming telly, Audis, Apple products, oh and get pot holes, supermarket parent & child parking spaces, animal rights on a par with humans for the cute furry ones sorted then non of this shit matters, everyone else can get ta **** like 😉

    sas78
    Full Member

    Great, when will the MPs be voting on getting rid of their archaic gold plated pension scheme then?

    We are not all in this together.

    Drac
    Full Member

    Nothing has changed, the Tories have expressed an aspiration to change the retirement age but don’t plan to do it until 2023

    So where does the part that says it’s moved 7 years forward 2037 come from then? Why are you saying it’s even earlier than that?

    lucorave
    Free Member

    Binners
    Future generations will stare in disbelief into how we all got hoodwinked into that particular pyramid scheme. I know I do.

    Completely agree. It’s just one giant Ponzi scheme.

    jambalaya
    Free Member

    The state pension age is not when you have to retire, you can do so before if you wish. Given the level of the state pension most people are earning much more money so at the very least they can increase savings in later years matching their lifestyle they will have if they have to rely 100% on the state pension.

    As for suggestion above about variable wtihdrawl a commentator on Sky made the same suggestion, its an interesting one and matches what you can do with private pensions. Taking a smaller amount sooner would make sense for many

    I think the SNP have a point that with the life expectancy in Scotland being lower perhaps they shoukd have a higher level of pension / earlier retirement but that only works if their system is fully funded which its not as rUK subsidises them.

    binners
    Full Member

    Maybe it could be linked to your fried food and buckfast consumption?

    stumpyjon
    Full Member

    Drac thats not what i meant. What they said on PM on radio 4 this evening was that to change the pension age required legislation and given the Tories lack of a majority they won’t get it through now. Apparently there is a pensions review scheduled for 2023 which is when they said they are planning to actually enact what has been announced today into law. So bottom line is it’s highly unlikely Maybot or even the conservatives or probably Corbyn will be in power then so theres lots of time for this to change (or possibly get worse when life expectancy is reviewed again after the 2021 census).

    Edit: I can’t see any mention of it on the BBC news website.

    tjagain
    Full Member

    whitestone – Member

    They (whichever government) made a mistake when they fixed it at 65. They should have specified it as X years younger than the average life expectancy. The advantage would be that the costs of pensions would be relatively static (allowing for inflation and population growth)

    Would work in some professions but not others. I am already beginning to find my job physically and emotionally hard to do as a relativly fit 56 yr old. there is no way on earth I would be able to do this for another 12 years. simply not possible

    Do you really want a 68 yr old policeman? Fire officer? Paramedic?

    5thElefant
    Free Member

    Do different job? That was easy.

    seosamh77
    Free Member

    How’s about they just make it, work yer 35 qualifying years then ye can collect it, longer you leave it higher pension you get, and tax people accordingly to fund it..

    gonefishin
    Free Member

    Would work in some professions but not others. I am already beginning to find my job physically and emotionally hard to do as a relativly fit 56 yr old. there is no way on earth I would be able to do this for another 12 years. simply not possible

    This only applies to the State pension. Claiming the occupational pension is different and can be claimed at a much earlier age, albeit with reduced payments.

    tjagain
    Full Member

    5thElefant – Member

    Do different job? That was easy.

    Really – what do you think I should / could retrain as as a 60 yr old with a bad back and feet and no skills outside my profession that I will no longer be physically ans mentally able to do.

    gonfishing – you realise that the tory attacks on our occupational pensions make this no longer possible – I am luck in that I will be able to take my small occupational pension at 60 – but people entering the profession after me will not – the only way to get your NHS pension before 65 in a few yers time will be to be retired as medically unfit. vastly reduced occupational pension and no state pension. So reliant on benefits

    5thElefant
    Free Member

    Really – what do you think I should / could retrain as as a 60 yr old with a bad back and feet and no skills outside my profession that I will no longer be physically ans mentally able to do.[/quote]
    Sure. Only retrain if you’re genuinely incapable of independent thought, otherwise just do something different. If you’re incapable of doing anything else then claim benefits.

    I’m sure most people are more than capable of being useful in some capacity well into their old age. I certainly hope to be.

    tjagain
    Full Member

    5th – I have very specialised skills and knowledge. What on earth do you think I could get a job as? given the almost impossibility of current 60 somethings even those with marketable skills have now in finding employment

    Your grasp on reality is somewhat tenuous

    5thElefant
    Free Member

    Your lack of self confidence is disturbing.

    Anyway, as a I said, if someone is unemployable put them on benefits. Universal pension is just weird. Why assume everyone useless at 68 when it’s just a minority that are?

    kennyp
    Free Member

    As usual on any pensions thread there are people moaning about how their generation has been screwed over by the baby boomers generation as if we should somehow individually feel guilty. The perception seems to be that the boomers took some sort of collective decision to “cheat” the generation coming after.

    Well I’m sorry to have to knock that huge chip off your shoulders, but it didn’t happen that way. Firstly, we didn’t all have a massive meeting where we decided to be (as you see it) selfish. It’s not physically possible.

    “But it’s in the way you voted” I hear you whinge. Again sorry, but we voted for a mix of right wing and left wing governments, so more or less balanced out. And I can assure you that pensions provision was very rarely ever mentioned. The vast bulk of us (myself included) gave it very little thought whatsoever when choosing how to cast our vote. We knew we’d have to contribute towards our own pensions as the state pension wouldn’t be enough, and that’s the same for you guys now. However as an election issue it was way, way down the list. Most folk voted (as they still do) for what was best for them, their family and their country. No-one was voting to see their children or grandchildren (i.e. you lot) hard done by in any way.

    Also, life expectancy is rising faster that the state pension age, so your generation will on average have longer to enjoy retirement. How you fund that retirement is exactly the same problem our generation faced. There’s no easy answer, and yes it’s a balance between new bike today and better new bikes in a few decades, but trust me, we’ve all been there.

    Every generation thinks it is hard done by. That’s just the way life is I’m afraid.

    molgrips
    Free Member

    What on earth do you think I could get a job as?

    You could do any number of un-skilled jobs. But be better at them than some gormless youngster due to greater experience and confidence.

    Perhaps some kind of quota system for oldies and youngies for companies? Only slightly serious.. but the state could step in somehow and encourage suitable employment for older people rather than simply pay for them..?

    You for example TJ could be doing part time work training people in your special skills, researching or something – or maybe some kind of community work?

    wilburt
    Free Member

    I dont have an issue with an increase in pension age in line with life expectancy.

    What I dont agree with is this ‘save more’ rhetoric by the already comfortable.

    Why not tax companies sufficiently to properly provide for those people when they can no longer work?
    The shareholder would have to take a marginal hit but they are largely the pension funds.

    If his whole freakin merry go round isnt mutually beneficial whats the point in it all?

    molgrips
    Free Member

    I’m sure most people are more than capable of being useful in some capacity well into their old age. I certainly hope to be.

    You’re falling into the trap of “Well I’m capable and confident, so I see no reason why everyone else shouldn’t also be.”

    If we are to keep people in suitable worthwhile work as I said, it needs to be managed and planned, we cannot leave it to market forces.

    wilburt
    Free Member

    Oh and as per my first post AI is about to decimate many industries as mass employers so your prospect of get a job over 60 will be next to zero.

    Someone somehow is going to have to pay for a lot of folk to do not a lot.

    Higher tax or a society of the elite and the plebs are the only options.

    ahwiles
    Free Member

    It’s hard enough changing career direction in your thirties. But we’re expecting businesses to employ 60yr olds too knackered for their old jobs?

    Really?

    trauty
    Free Member

    this thread is deppressing as it is.
    here is my plan. try to steal enough cash and escape to sunny places.

    chestercopperpot
    Free Member

    I know it’s a laughable as if. Anyone in the real world knows it won’t happen on mass.

    These **** that talk about people as though we are chattels, lucky to be allowed to exist in the first place and should be bloody grateful, get ****.

Viewing 40 posts - 41 through 80 (of 143 total)

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