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Pensions Guide: State Pensions
The most important financial decisions you’re likely to make
in your life are those concerning your retirement. To have a
secure future with a comfortable standard of living after
you’ve stopped working, you’ll need to plan your finances
carefully.
Pensions are becoming more and more important as people now
live longer into their retirement. Lifestyles have also
changed – people often take out mortgages later in life than
they used to, meaning that they may still have a mortgage to
repay when they stop working. And as people are experiencing
better health and longer retirements, they want to have a
reasonable disposable income in order to enjoy more leisure
activities in their later years.
This is the first of two guides outlining the fundamentals
of pensions.
It’ll help you understand more about state pensions and how
they are calculated. The second guide focuses on private
pension schemes. These articles do not constitute financial
advice and should only be used as an introductory
informational guide to pensions. For advice on how to plan
your finances for your future, seek professional advice from
an independent financial advisor.
Definition
First, back to basics – what is a pension? It’s a regular
source of tax-free income for you to live on when you
retire. As contributions towards your pension fund during
your working life also receive tax relief, it’s a more
tax-efficient than other methods of saving.
The government department responsible for managing and
administering state pensions and other pensions related
benefits is The Pension Service, which is part of the
Department of Work and Pensions.
State pension
The government provides a state pension, which can be
claimed by men over the age of 65 and women over the age of
60 (although this will increase to 65 in line with the male
pension age by 2020).
Not everyone qualifies for a state pension, and even those
who do will receive different incomes depending on their
working history.
Entitlement is calculated according to the number of
national insurance contributions (NICs) you (or your
partner/spouse) have paid, which are converted into
‘qualifying years’. You’ll need to have worked and paid
contributions for around 90% of your adult working life in
order to receive the full state pension. If you’ve been out
of work for long periods in order to bring up a family or
look after someone, you’ll be compensated for missing NICs
through ‘Home Responsibilities Protection’. If you’ve been
out of work for other reasons and have been claiming
benefits such as jobseeker’s allowance, or income support,
the government will have paid your NICs on your behalf for
the period(s) in which you claimed benefit. The minimum you
need to get the basic state pension is 25% of the qualifying
years. If you have anywhere between the minimum and maximum
amount of qualifying years, the amount you receive in your
state pension will be adjusted in relation to how many
qualifying years you have, so the more you have, the better.
Those who have less than 25% of qualifying years won’t be
able to claim any state pension at all, although there are
other government pension benefits to assist those on low
incomes in retirement, such as pension credits or the Over
80 pension.
Additional state pension schemes
In addition to the basic state pension, the government has a
top-up scheme to enable people to increase the amount of
pension income they receive.
SERPS (State Earnings-Related Pension Scheme)
Until April 2002, SERPS was the government’s second pension
scheme, which allowed anyone earning more than £75 per week
to make additional NICs. The level of NICs paid was
earnings-related. However, the government deemed SERPS
unfair on people with low incomes and those with big gaps in
their employment history, so it was crapped and replaced
with the Second State Pension in 2002 with the aim of
allowing everyone to save more for their retirement.
SERPS gave the option of ‘contracting out’, which could be
done for one of two reasons: in order not to pay the
additional NICs, or to put the additional NICs towards a
private pension fund.
Second State Pension
People who were paying into SERPS will now be paying into
the second state pension and may therefore receive their
additional state pension from two different sources when
they retire.
The Second State Pension is still linked to earnings.
However, it’s calculated in a way that provides better
support to those on low incomes, or people who don’t have
constant work because of illness or disability. In these
cases, the government tops up their credits to a flat rate
of £12,100, so they will receive NICs as if they had earned
an annual salary up to this amount.
As with SERPS, it’s possible to ‘contract out’ of the Second
State Pension, either to stop paying the additional NICs or
to put them towards your own pension fund.
Finding out how much your state benefits are worth
To help you plan your savings towards your retirement, the
government offers state pension forecasts to let you see how
much you’ll be likely to receive as retirement income. Visit
the Government Pensions Service website for more information
(http://www.thepensionservice.gov.uk).
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