The retirement landscape in the UK has changed significantly over the last 50 years:
From that history emerges a theoretical gap for those who started their working lives roughly in the fifteen years from the turn of the century. Outside the public sector, most would not have joined a final salary pension scheme, and some would have had low or even no pension scheme membership until they joined a workplace pension, thanks to the phasing in of AE.
New research undertaken by one of the UK’s major pension providers has discovered that the theory is very much a reality. It found a generation of people born between the early 1970s and late 1980s who were too young to benefit from DB schemes, but also too old to feel the full benefit of AE. Five million of the mid-lifers, currently aged 40–54, are not on track for an adequate retirement. Of that 9% of the UK adult population worst at risk are part-time workers, renters and those who have taken a career break.
The research did offer some hope for a way out of the pension mid-life crisis: start putting more into retirement plans now, as there are at least 13 years before State pension age arrives.
The value of your investment and any income from it can go down as well as up and you may not get back the full amount you invested.
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