It's all very well to complain about the 'unfairness' of government or local authority final salary pension schemes and low interest rates on savings...but what is the solution to the fact that life expectancy is now well beyond what it was in the 1940s, 1900s or whenever it was that the current contributory pension scheme was introduced?
One answer is of course to raise the retirement age although that is a tad unfair on unskilled manual workers whose life expectancy is on the whole lower than that of people with managerial or professional jobs and who will therefore enjoy fewer years of retirement. It's also hard to envisage a sixty-eight-year-old scaffolder or infant teacher...
Most of the population currently simply cannot afford to save for a pension sufficient for a comfortable retirement. On current trends there will simply not be enough people of working age to provide the tax revenue to fund a decent pension scheme - unless, of course, we allow unrestricted immigration.
We obviously don't want a future where young workers will pass retired folk holding out begging bowls in the street. Some few years ago there was talk of an all-Party consultation on the future of pension provision but does anyone recall what became of that proposal?
One way could be for pension provision to be taken out of the hands of the state. We already allow the state to take from us a huge percentage - well over 50% - of our income through various taxes: income tax, VAT, petrol tax, air passenger duty, stamp duty, payroll taxes, corporation tax, tax on alcohol and tobacco and many more taxes. Of course taxes are needed to provide basic infrastructure and some social services but if we were allowed to keep more of our own money then most of us could take personal responsibility for our old age.
I'm thinking of a scheme rather like the health service provision in Canada and some European countries where a few government approved providers offer a range of pension schemes with a safety net so the low-paid aren't unduly handicapped.
Almost every day we hear of ÂŁmillions wasted by the government on hamfisted ill-conceived schemes...the NHS computer fiasco, various weaponry systems, IDS' botched welfare reform, the rail fiasco...the dreadful PF schemes favoured by Gordon Brown... all of it OUR money.
I honestly don't know if that kind of thing would work, I'm no economist, but I see no signs of anyone in government thinking outside the box.
But whatever solutions are proposed, nothing can be achieved imo until the problem of low pay for working people is sorted out equitably and efficiently.
Some of our tax revenue of course goes into the pockets of landlords and employers via Working Family Tax Credit and Housing Benefit...the working not-so-poor subsidising the working poor.
One answer is of course to raise the retirement age although that is a tad unfair on unskilled manual workers whose life expectancy is on the whole lower than that of people with managerial or professional jobs and who will therefore enjoy fewer years of retirement. It's also hard to envisage a sixty-eight-year-old scaffolder or infant teacher...
Most of the population currently simply cannot afford to save for a pension sufficient for a comfortable retirement. On current trends there will simply not be enough people of working age to provide the tax revenue to fund a decent pension scheme - unless, of course, we allow unrestricted immigration.
We obviously don't want a future where young workers will pass retired folk holding out begging bowls in the street. Some few years ago there was talk of an all-Party consultation on the future of pension provision but does anyone recall what became of that proposal?
One way could be for pension provision to be taken out of the hands of the state. We already allow the state to take from us a huge percentage - well over 50% - of our income through various taxes: income tax, VAT, petrol tax, air passenger duty, stamp duty, payroll taxes, corporation tax, tax on alcohol and tobacco and many more taxes. Of course taxes are needed to provide basic infrastructure and some social services but if we were allowed to keep more of our own money then most of us could take personal responsibility for our old age.
I'm thinking of a scheme rather like the health service provision in Canada and some European countries where a few government approved providers offer a range of pension schemes with a safety net so the low-paid aren't unduly handicapped.
Almost every day we hear of ÂŁmillions wasted by the government on hamfisted ill-conceived schemes...the NHS computer fiasco, various weaponry systems, IDS' botched welfare reform, the rail fiasco...the dreadful PF schemes favoured by Gordon Brown... all of it OUR money.
I honestly don't know if that kind of thing would work, I'm no economist, but I see no signs of anyone in government thinking outside the box.
But whatever solutions are proposed, nothing can be achieved imo until the problem of low pay for working people is sorted out equitably and efficiently.
Some of our tax revenue of course goes into the pockets of landlords and employers via Working Family Tax Credit and Housing Benefit...the working not-so-poor subsidising the working poor.