Pensions - Articles - Private pensions enjoy new lease of life


 New figures show the private sector industries and occupations which have seen the most significant growth in pension saving since 2012.

 Britain’s salesmen, bar tenders and hotel staff are amongst workers at the forefront of the country’s pensions’ revolution – with rocketing rates of saving amongst their ranks outstripping those of other sectors.

 New figures released show the private sector industries and occupations which have seen the most significant growth in pension saving since 2012.

 Sales and customer service has seen a leap in participation of 15 percentage points, from 27% to 42%, while those working in distribution, hotels and restaurants have seen a climb from 27% to 36%.

 Other parts of the economy seeing a big jump in pension saving include energy and water, where the number of staff participating in a scheme has risen from 64% to 74%.

 These workers are spearheading a turnaround in what was a decade-long decline in private pension provision, with the government’s automatic enrolment policy a key factor behind the reversal.

 Minister for Pensions Steve Webb said:

 "Automatic enrolment is transforming the way Britain’s workers see pension saving and, as these industry-by-industry figures show, we’re seeing the change we need across the whole economy.

 This is another example of action by this government which is creating a fairer society. We still have some way to go until we’ve completely put right the years of decline in our pension system, but we’re making very strong and steady progress."

 Automatic enrolment is being introduced in a phased approach, with every employer in the country due to offer eligible staff a workplace pension by 2018, regardless of how many people they employ.

 This means that over the next 4 years, we expect the number of pension savers across all industry sectors to climb further, giving people across society the chance of a more comfortable retirement.

 Automatic enrolment is helping to ensure that people will be better off, not only by encouraging and helping them to put money aside for the future, but because employers will also make regular contributions to their employees’ pension pots. The government contributes too in the form of tax relief.

 So far about 4.7 million people have been automatically enrolled.

Back to Index


Similar News to this Story

PPF confirms zero levy for 2026/27
PPF confirms it won’t charge conventional DB schemes a PPF levy next year. Proportionate risk-based ACS levy will be maintained; PPF will work with in
Call for stability ahead of Spring Statement
Ahead of the Spring Statement, PensionBee is warning that further adjustments to pension policy would only add to saver uncertainty, urging the Govern
Pension Credit applications down by 36 percent
New research on Pension Credit journeys conducted by the DWP shows that beyond high-level understanding of what Pension Credit was and who it was for,

Site Search

Exact   Any  

Latest Actuarial Jobs

Actuarial Login

Email
Password
 Jobseeker    Client
Reminder Logon

APA Sponsors

Actuarial Jobs & News Feeds

Jobs RSS News RSS

WikiActuary

Be the first to contribute to our definitive actuarial reference forum. Built by actuaries for actuaries.