Jan 25th, 2010
by Jennie Kreser.
I was reading the latest edition of Saga Magazine at the weekend (look – it was lying around on my parents’ coffee table alright – I am obviously far too young to have a subscription myself!!), and began reading the main article.
It contained various interviews with some of the great of the pension and age industry about what they would like so see as the next development in legislation or societal planning.
Jan 8th, 2010
by Jennie Kreser.
The Personal Accounts Delivery Authority has announced a near £400,000 rebrand of it’s new offering. Goodbye Personal Accounts (which did exactly what it says on the tin) and Hello to NEST or more accurately perhaps, the NEST Corporation.
I have it on very good authority that this has no connection to SMERSH, the KGB or white furry cats being cuddled by mad dictators (although I think I can just about see Tim Jones stroking one!!), but is instead the new name for the organisation which will oversee the Peoples’ Pension Scheme (my term, a bit Post Office ish but pretty good I thought!!)
Dec 7th, 2009
by Jennie Kreser.
In a ‘well who’d ever have thought it…’ kind of moment, the Confederation of British Industry (CBI) has announced that according to its research, final salary schemes are the cause of more misery for companies than…well…money purchase schemes.
For those of you who find the whole thought of pensions far too depressing and confusing (and let’s face it, that’s most of the population including several pension lawyers of my acquaintance!!) let me try and give a short guide to the difference.
Nov 23rd, 2009
by Jennie Kreser.
Axa has announced that it is launching a competition to find a new name for “pensions” after a survey revealed that 18% of respondents associated it with “grey” and 72% of younger people associated it with old age. Well – d’uh…yeah!
It is perhaps this last statistic (or rotten lie -depending on your point of view) that is the most worrying.
The hard sad fact is that unless you have begun some sort of decent non-State pension provision by the age of 30, you are likely to retire in penury come age 65 (or 68, 70, take your pick).