UK. Next PM must confront triple lock sustainability challenge
| Steven Cameron, Pensions Director at Aegon, has urged politicians to address the long-term sustainability of the State Pension triple lock, warning that the next Prime Minister cannot continue to sidestep the issue. |
|
Cameron says growing scrutiny of State Pension funding should prompt a wider debate about the future of the triple lock. While reaffirming the State Pension’s importance to millions of retirees, he argues policymakers should look beyond a simple choice between retaining or abolishing the triple lock and instead consider reforms that preserve its core aims while improving long-term affordability.
Steven Cameron, Pensions Director at Aegon, said: “The next Prime Minister – whether or not Andy Burnham – will inherit many pressing challenges, and on that list is the future of the State Pensions triple lock.
“While avoided by successive governments, politicians across the spectrum as well as think tanks are now increasingly questioning its long-term future and today’s political change creates the opportunity for an open and honest debate. Importantly, it’s not a simple case of keep it or scrap it – there are other options worthy of proper consideration.
“The State Pension remains the bedrock of retirement income for millions of pensioners. Under the triple lock, the state pension increases each year by the highest of earnings growth, price inflation or 2.5%. While remaining popular amongst pensioner voters, retaining and often boosting their purchasing power, the mathematics just aren’t sustainable in the current form over the decades ahead.
“Recent comments from Burnham, reaffirming he if Prime Minister, would retain support for the triple lock, may provide short-term reassurance to today’s pensioners. But what’s needed from all major political party leaders is a longer-term vision for how the State Pension can remain fair, affordable, and sustainable not for the next three years but for the next 30 years and beyond.
“What’s clear is that public finances are under huge and increasing pressure. There’s no magic pot of money sitting to pay for state pensions – they’re paid for by today’s workers on a ‘pay as you go’ basis. With an ageing population and fewer workers supporting more pensioners, the current system is already creaking at the seams and without reform, the triple lock will place an unprecedented burden on working-age taxpayers, raising serious questions around intergenerational fairness.
“Aegon has long supported an amended form of the triple lock which would retain the principle of pensioners sharing in rises in the nation’s prosperity while introducing greater stability. Recently, year on year inflation and earnings growth have been unpredictable and volatile. A fairer approach might be to provide inflation increases as a minimum with a further uplift if earnings growth has exceeded inflation over say three years. Read more @actuarialpost
|
