Sunderland Echo

Move to open workplace pensions to 18-year-olds

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Proposals which could lower the age at which people are automatica­lly placed in a workplace pension to 18 are being backed by the Government.

Currently, employers must automatica­lly enrol workers into a pension scheme and make contributi­ons if they are aged between 22 and the state pension age and earn at least £10,000 a year.

The lower earnings limit, at £6,240, is the minimum level of an enrolled worker’s earnings on which they and their employer have to pay contributi­ons.

Conservati­ve MP Jonathan Gullis’s Private Members’ Bill, backed by the Government, grants two extensions to automatic enrolment – abolishing the lower earnings limit for contributi­ons and reducing the age for being automatica­lly enrolled to 18. Removing the lower earnings limit could help to bring more lower earners and people working part-time jobs into automatic enrolment.

The Bill cleared its first hurdle after

MPs gave it an unopposed second reading.

It will undergo further scrutiny at a later date and is on track to become law.

The intention is that the provisions will not result in any immediate change but will give the Secretary of State powers to amend the age limit and lower the qualifying earnings limit for automatic enrolment. There will be a statutory requiremen­t to consult and report on the outcomes to inform the implementa­tion approach and timing, before using these powers. Minister for Pensions Laura Trott said: “We know that these widely supported measures will make a meaningful difference to people’s pension saving over the years ahead.

“Doing this will see the Government deliver on our commitment to help grow the economy and support the hard-working people of this country, particular­ly groups such as women, young people and lower earners who have historical­ly found it harder to save for retirement.”

Mr Gullis, who represents Stoke-onTrent North, said: “With all the evidence of the huge positive impact it can have, it is a no-brainer that we now need to extend auto-enrolment to those aged

18 and above.”Nigel Peaple, director of policy and advocacy at the Pensions and Lifetime Savings Associatio­n (PLSA), said: “Automatic enrolment has seen over 10 million people newly saving or saving more for a pension in the UK. This is a genuine success story. Combined with the new state pension, automatic enrolment ensures that many more people can meet some of the costs of later life.

“The PLSA supports increasing the momentum in automatic enrolment by extending it to workers under age 22 and removing the lower earnings limit so that people save from the first pound of earnings.

“We have also long maintained that in order for savers to reach an adequate income in retirement, further increases should be undertaken over the next decade so that (automatic enrolment) rises from an 8% pension contributi­on today to around 12% in the early 2030s – split 50/50 between employers and employees.”

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