Donate SIGN UP

Pension Income

Avatar Image
1581960 | 19:43 Wed 07th Feb 2024 | News
18 Answers

I just wonder what sort of world these people live in, this is a snippet from:-

https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/retirement/income-needed-to-retire-jumps-as-family-costs-rise/ar-BB1hTgxQ

"A single person will need £31,300 a year for a moderate income in retirement, according to a pensions industry body.

The rising cost of living and an expectation to offer financial support to grandchildren had pushed up the income required by £8,000, it said.

The Pensions and Lifetime Savings Association (PLSA) uses evidence from focus groups to make the estimates.

It is intended as a guide for those planning their retirement savings.

The calculations are pitched at three different levels - minimum, moderate and comfortable - and are developed and maintained independently by the Centre for Research in Social Policy at Loughborough University.

They estimated that a single person needed £14,400 a year for a minimum income, and £43,100 a year for a comfortable retirement.

Couples required a joint £22,400 at the minimum level, £43,100 at a moderate level, and £59,000 at a comfortable level."

Gravatar

Answers

1 to 18 of 18rss feed

Best Answer

No best answer has yet been selected by 1581960. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.

For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.

Ah, so my pension is less than moderate then. Good job I was born when one learnt to cope.

The figures don't seem to take into account housing costs, which could make a major difference to the calculations.

For example, the majority of home owners are likely to have paid off their mortgages by the time that they retire.  So the only money that they'll need to spend on their homes will be the costs of keeping it in good repair.

However those who rent their homes will continue to have to pay rent after they retire.  In many parts of the country, £1500 per month doesn't get you very much on the rental market these days.  So someone having to pay that much rent will need £18k p.a. for housing costs alone.

Question Author

You & me alike OG, and I expect the vast majority are the same, except for the worse off perhaps.

Question Author

One way or another we all have housing costs, we needed windows replaced last year and new garage roof a few years ago. Their figures seem pie-in-the-sky to me.

maybe its because all the "kids" are still living at home and barely paying their way.

85% of statistics are made up.

Question Author

All the kids and all the grandchildren perhaps.

Thanks Canary42, might well be more than 85% here.

the kids may have to lower their expectations when having kids of their own. No way they're going to be send their aged parents up the chimneys to earn a bit extra.

That said, the current generation of baby boomers are probably the richest bunch of pensioners there ever was. As Buenchico points out a lot of them will have paid off their homes and have plenty to spare. But that's an average. Lots more are poor.

Not many baby boomers worked for companies that had pension schemes back in the day.  Certainly not the blue collar workers.  We were not  encouraged either when we were young to think about retirement.  We certainly aren't the richest group of people.  Certainly not in poorer areas of the country.  

I don't think grandparents should be expected to provide for their grandchildren.  

noboody's encouraged to think about it Countrylover but people do. I didn't bother till I was 30 and taking up the job that occupied the rest of my working life, but I would have thought most people were paying attention by that age?

I agree lots of people didn't have workplace pensions, but I still think the figures were more and better than ever before.

There is certainly a disparagy when the average salary in the UK is £29,600 per year for someone working full time. And they think a person needs £43,100 in retirement.

I agree Jackson.  And I certainly would t expect retirees to be involved in providing for grandchildren.  

The figures seem inflated to me and must be a slap in the face to anyone living on basic state pension plus whatever benefits they may be entitled to.

Don't forget when Gordon brown destroyed millions of final salary pensions schemes with his disgusting tax raid so he could give the money to his client state. Of course public sector workers were exempt from this robbery. 

Brown should be boiled in his own melted fat.

I don't take much notice of what spivs and leeches have to say

Canary; It's 85.736%.

 

Question Author

I started this thread with "I just wonder what sort of world these people live in".

I think it's cloud cuckoo land.

Thanks for all the comments.

 

1 to 18 of 18rss feed

Do you know the answer?

Pension Income

Answer Question >>