Britain’s pension system has “not kept up” with the changing economy as MPs face calls to “act now” and save millions from a retirement savings shortfall.
The UK’s pensions framework is under the spotlight following new research from the Pensions Policy Institute, which has published a report titled “Pensions Adequacy: Housing, Households and Auto-Enrolment”, on behalf of the ABI.
According to the findings, auto-enrolment has proven remarkably effective at encouraging millions to save for retirement. However, the scheme rests on assumptions about working patterns that have become increasingly disconnected from reality.
The research draws on evidence from the Pensions Commission’s Interim Report, which argues that pension pots alone can no longer determine whether someone will enjoy a comfortable retirement.
Growing numbers of people who rent rather than own property, evolving household compositions, and increasingly interrupted career paths mean more individuals face the prospect of insufficient income in later life.
They cannot participate in auto-enrolment, receive no employer contributions, and have no automatic mechanism prompting them to save.


