Top

How to cope with pension cutbacks

As a large insurance broker takes a knife to its company pension scheme, we come up with five ways to enhance your pension.

In his first Budget in 1997, the then Chancellor, Gordon Brown, introduced a tax change which deprived UK pension funds of an estimated £5 billion a year of income. Thanks to this loss, plus falling investment returns and longer lifespans, organisations have been making radical changes to their occupational pension schemes.

Companies cut back on pensions

Over the past twelve years, thousands of companies and organisations have reduced the benefits available to members of work-based pension schemes. First to go were final-salary (or defined-benefit) schemes, which provided workers with a guaranteed pension based on their salary at retirement. Providing such quality pension promises can add a quarter (25%) to salary costs, so firms started closing these schemes to new members.

Later, some firms went further by shutting down final-salary schemes completely and shifting all employees into inferior money-purchase schemes. With a money-purchase scheme, your pension at retirement depends on the contributions made, investment returns earned, charges deducted and annuity (pension income) rates when you retire. Thus, in these plans, you take the risk, rather than the company -- by far the cheaper option for the firm.

Aon prunes its pension payments

The latest big employer to take a knife to its company pension is US insurance broker Aon, which employs five thousand workers in the UK. Aon closed its final-salary scheme in 1999, replacing it with a money-purchase plan for new workers. In 2007, the firm closed down the scheme completely, forcing all existing members into the money-purchase scheme.

Until now, Aon has paid at least 6% into employees' pension pots, rising on a sliding scale to 12% for older workers. Workers contribute 2% of salary. Alas, Aon is ending the age-related extra contributions and will pay in only 6% of base salary, regardless of an employee's age. Thus, older employees of Aon face a big cut in their pension contributions. For the oldest workers, Aon's pension contribution will halve just when they need it most.

Personally, I think that Aon's move is disgraceful, as it is abandoning its UK workers in order to enrich its US shareholders. However, there is one saving grace: Aon has agreed to match extra pension contributions paid by its employees. So, employees worried about losing Aon's age-related contributions can reclaim these by putting in the same additional amount themselves.

Here's how it works for Aon's oldest workers:

Contributions before and after Aon's cut

Before

After

Employee (%)

Aon (%)

Employee (%)

Aon (%)

2

12

8

12

As you can see, before the cutback, this employee received 2 + 12 = 14% of salary into his pension. In order to keep his 12% contribution from Aon, he must quadruple his own contribution from 2% to 8%. This increases the total contribution to 20%, or a fifth of salary, which will help to build a bigger pension. In effect, in order to get the same contribution level from Aon, employees will have to raise their own contributions by between 1% and 6% of salary.

What if something similar happens to you?

If you're not a member of your work-based pension plan, then you should be, especially if your employer contributes to it on your behalf. Unfortunately, if you've been forced out of a final-salary scheme, then it's seriously expensive to earn a similar pension from a money-purchase scheme. Indeed, depending on your age, securing a comparable pension to that on offer from a final-salary scheme can cost up to a third (33%) of salary!

Given that few of us can afford to pay such massive sums into pensions, what are the alternatives? Here are five ideas to set you thinking:

1.    Grab your employer's contributions

If your employer contributes to its own pension scheme, then join it. Not doing so could cost you, say, up to 15% of your salary. Why lose this future pay when most of your colleagues are eagerly grabbing it?

2.    Pay the basic contributions

If it costs, say, 5% of your salary to be a member of a standard or enhanced occupational pension scheme, then join it and pay in at least this proportion of your pay. Usually, your employer's contributions are higher than yours, which means that you more than double your money on day one.

3.    Pay in matched contributions

If your employer offers to match your contributions pound for pound, then pay in as much extra as you can. For example, paying in an additional 5% of salary a year could put an extra 10% of your salary into your pension pot, thanks to one-for-one matching.

4.    Sacrifice some of your bonus

If you receive a yearly or quarterly bonus, then consider paying some of this windfall into your pension. For example, my wife's pension has swelled enormously in recent years, thanks to her paying her entire annual bonus into her company pension fund. Even better, by doing this, Mrs D has dodged taxes of up to 41% on her yearly performance-related bonus.

5.    Set up a low-cost alternative

If you don't have access to a decent company pension scheme, you're self-employed, or you don't want to pay any more into your occupational pension, then it's up to you to arrange your own retirement planning. I'd recommend looking around for a low-cost private pension, such as a Stakeholder personal pension or a Self-Invested Personal Pension (SIPP).

As I work for my own private limited company, there is no-one else willing to contribute to my pension. Hence, I've become a huge fan of my do-it-yourself Hargreaves Lansdown Vantage SIPP, which allows me to invest in a wide range of shares and funds at low cost.

More: Twenty years of DIY pensions | The death of guaranteed pensions?

Most Recent


Comments



  • 16 May 2009

    smallpen - only just spotted your post. Your problem is being sucked into effectively means tested benefits, whilst holding other assets. If you could ditch your Incapacity Benefit and claim DLA (Disability Living Allowance) then that does not take into account other earnings. If you were eligible, you could take your pension (now after the age of 55) and you might find you could obtain an enhanced impaired annuity rate. Were DLA appropriate at the middle or higher rate, then the superb Motability Scheme might also be available where a new car is provided in lieu of the (higher rate) mobility element of the benefit. And don't worry if you can no longer drive, your wife/partner/carer can do that for you. At state pension age, the benefit would morph into Attendance Allowance. If you don't qualify for DLA, then it depends what level of pension is in your SIPP. If it would produce less than 45.00 per week (after taking your tax free lump sum) than at age 60, you could claim Pension Credit which would passport to housing and council tax benefit. You might find that help with the housing costs gained would dwarf your loss of Incap. It all depends whether you own or rent and have a wife/partner and whether they are earning. Hope this helps

    REPORT This comment has been reported.
    0

  • 13 April 2009

    The highest amount you can take from a pension pot is 25% I would like to draw you to my own predicament ref pension income. I'm 58 and made redundant in Sept 2008 after 23 years service;incidentally I was continuously employed from 1967-2008.From 2002-2008 I have received Incapacity benefit-- now £90 per week--plus monthly income from health insurance provided with my occupational pension scheme.I received a reasonable redundancy payoff.This now my dilemma: Current Income £90 per week ( Incap Ben taxable) + £85 per week(occ pen also taxable) I have a reasonable SIPP pot but any further pension income as well as being taxed20% @ source will also see my Incap Ben reduced by 50p for every £1 above my allowable level of £175 gross per week. Therefore at that point I will be paying the equivalent of 70% income tax on any income---ensuring that I will possibly be the highest rated tax payer in the U.K. Shouldn't be surprised if Fred the Shred has a quiet chuckle at this. How the heck this should be the case is beyond me.I've contributed without fail to the Government coffers and I am only in this position because of "failed neuro-surgery" in the NHS. Any advice on how to circumnavigate this system would be more than appreciated. Many thanks

    REPORT This comment has been reported.
    0

  • 12 April 2009

    [b]I am sick of being ripped off by the financial industry.[/b] I have been a victim of Equitable Life ( AVCs) Standard Life ( endowment mis-selling ) Investec, who managed to make the £5000 I invested into £1600. My latest sickener is the £10000 I invested in the Virgin Climate Change fund has plummeted 50+% in twelve months. I moved money into this fund having read an article in Motley Fool (thanks very much) on how Virgin had enlisted the best investment managers in the city to manage the fund. They have the damned cheek to charge me for losing my money faster than I can earn it. I have just received a statement from Norwich Union, they have lost 20% of a personal pension plan I have had for twenty years in one year. To add insult to injury, they have projected a pension from a £30000 pot of £1188 pounds per annum. By my calculation, if they did not get any growth at all on this capital, I would have to live till I'm 90 to use up my pot. So where is all MY money going, into Norwich Union, er sorry, AVIVa's coffers. It is time the people of this country told our politicians that we will not have rip off annuities where the fat cats get OUR money if we are unfortunate enough to die with money still left in the pot, what's left in the pot , on death, should be part of one's estate. I agree with [b]Heraclitus and [/b]I will resist buying an annuity for as long as possible. 

    REPORT This comment has been reported.
    0

Do you want to comment on this article? You need to be signed in for this feature

Most Popular

Copyright © lovemoney.com All rights reserved.

 

loveMONEY.com Financial Services Limited is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) with Firm Reference Number (FRN): 479153.

loveMONEY.com is a company registered in England & Wales (Company Number: 7406028) with its registered address at First Floor Ridgeland House, 15 Carfax, Horsham, West Sussex, RH12 1DY, United Kingdom. loveMONEY.com Limited operates under the trading name of loveMONEY.com Financial Services Limited. We operate as a credit broker for consumer credit and do not lend directly. Our company maintains relationships with various affiliates and lenders, which we may promote within our editorial content in emails and on featured partner pages through affiliate links. Please note, that we may receive commission payments from some of the product and service providers featured on our website. In line with Consumer Duty regulations, we assess our partners to ensure they offer fair value, are transparent, and cater to the needs of all customers, including vulnerable groups. We continuously review our practices to ensure compliance with these standards. While we make every effort to ensure the accuracy and currency of our editorial content, users should independently verify information with their chosen product or service provider. This can be done by reviewing the product landing page information and the terms and conditions associated with the product. If you are uncertain whether a product is suitable, we strongly recommend seeking advice from a regulated independent financial advisor before applying for the products.