Retirement saving targets – still too low
The Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) has been crunching the numbers on the adequacy of pension contributions.
The Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) has been crunching the numbers on the adequacy of pension contributions.
One of the unremarked government successes of the 2010s was the introduction of automatic enrolment of employees into pension schemes. The first automatic enrolment contributions were made in October 2012 under the coalition government. However, the thinking behind the scheme was rooted in the Pensions Commission, which was set in motion by the previous Labour government at the end of 2002.
The Commission produced a series of weighty reports, the first one of which emerged in 2004. One of the important elements of the first report were two tables:
The Pensions Commission replacement rates relied on detailed assumptions, but were robust enough to convince politicians on all sides that there was a route to achieving adequate retirement income that was affordable and, crucially, did not need state funding.
Twenty years on, the Institute for Fiscal Studies has revisited the Pensions Commission’s tables and recalculated them allowing for:
The results are shown below, based on an individual aged 22 in 2023, retiring at State Pension age (currently set at 68 in 2069).
Earnings level/ Replacement rate |
2004 |
2023 |
||
Earnings |
Contribution rate |
Earnings |
Contribution rate |
|
Low / 80% |
£9.000 |
0.0% |
£16,000 |
3.3% |
Middle / 67% |
£21,250 |
9.2% |
£38,500 |
10.3% |
High / 50% |
£50,000 |
8.5% |
£90,000 |
10.0% |
Source: IFS
These contribution rates apply to full earnings, unlike the current auto-enrolment rules which levied – at a minimum of 8% – only on earnings between £6,240 and £50,270. The message from the IFS table is one common among pension experts: auto-enrolment contributions alone are not enough.
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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