The government has revived the Pension Commission is it  seeks to confront a retirement crisis that risks tomorrow's pensioners being  poorer than today's. The Commission will look to build on the work of its 2006  predecessor which played a key role in the introduction of automatic enrolment  into pensions schemes. The relaunched Commission will explore the obstacles stopping  people from saving enough for retirement. In this month's Hot Topic we  take a look at the Pension Commission.
Income set to fall
Since 2006, the Pension Commission automatic enrolment into  pensions has increased from 55% in 2012 to 88% of eligible employees now.
However, government analysis shows that there is more to do,  with the incomes of retirees set to fall over the next few decades if nothing  changes. The analysis shows that retirees in 2050 are on course for £800 or 8%  less private pension income than those retiring today.
In addition, nearly 15 million people are under saving for  retirement with the self-employed, low earners and some ethnic minorities  particularly at risk, according to the government.
Minimum contribution
While the introduction of automatic enrolment increased the  numbers saving, saving levels have often remained low. Around 50% workers in  the private sector only save around the minimum contribution level (8% or less  of earnings).
The government says the relaunched Commission will explore  the complex barriers stopping people from saving enough for retirement, with  its final report due in 2027. It will examine the pension system as a whole and  look at what is required to build a 'future-proof pensions system that is  strong, fair and sustainable'.
Minister for Pensions, Torsten Bell, says: 'The original  Pensions Commission helped get pension saving up and pensioner poverty down.  But if we carry on as we are, tomorrow's retirees risk being poorer than  today's.
'So we are reviving the Pensions Commission to finish the  job and give today's workers secure retirements to look forward to.'
Route to higher living standards
The UK's business groups welcomed the relaunch of the  Pension Commission.
Rain Newton-Smith, Chief Executive of the Confederation of  British Industry (CBI), says: 'The only route to higher living standards both  in work and in retirement is through higher growth, productivity and better  savings.
'As we look to the next decade and beyond, finding a  consensus across business, government and our society on how to support people  to save by building on the Mansion House reforms can create a pathway to a  better future.
'Taking the time to review the best pathway to achieve this,  whilst pursuing broader measures to support growth, will be needed to make it  affordable for employers and workers and crucial to the aim of rising living  standards, now and in retirement.'
Landmark move
The Association of Independent Professionals and the  Self-Employed (IPSE) described the relaunch as a 'landmark move' to address the  growing retirement savings gap among the self-employed.
It welcomes the fact that the new Commission will explicitly  examine why the self-employed remain particularly vulnerable when it comes to  saving for later life – a longstanding concern for the sector.
The self-employed are still largely excluded from frameworks  like automatic enrolment.
Fred Hicks, Senior Policy Adviser at IPSE, says: 'This is a  landmark moment in the long-neglected question of how to boost self-employed  pension pots and improve their outcomes in retirement.
'It's hugely encouraging that government is putting this  issue under the spotlight with the new Pensions Commission, which has a clear  intent to focus on those who have so far been left behind.
'It feels like long-overdue recognition that a bigger  self-employed is not a short-term trend, but a permanent and important feature  of our economy – and that we now need to design a pensions system that truly  works for them.'
Rainy days
The new Pensions Commission should boost future generations'  living standards in retirement and taking on the equally pressing 'rainy day'  savings challenge, according to the Resolution Foundation think tank.
The Foundation says the current one-size-fits-all system of  automatic enrolment creates risks and needs reform. Some low-earners may be  saving more than they can afford, or need to, while others – particularly  middle- and higher-earners – are still saving too little.
Decent pension pots are not the only saving challenge  families face today either, with one-in-three working age adults living in  families with savings of less than £1,000. Higher default contribution  rates will make it harder for people to save into 'rainy day' accounts.
Greater flexibility will be needed therefore to reduce the  tension between saving for retirement and saving for a rainy day, says the  Foundation.
Complex system
The UK's pension system remains complex to many of those  saving within it. Developments in recent years have seen substantial changes to  the rules. Planning for retirement is more important than ever, please contact us for information on the right strategies for you.