Lord Hutton has just announced his proposals for the reform of public sector pensions. The proposals clearly demonstrate the impact of increasing longevity such that the extension to our lives has been calculated as an extra 5 hours for every day we live. This effectively means living 29 hours a day ie 24 now and 5 for the future. How we live our 24 hours today ie in terms of keeping fit and healthy will impact how we live our extra 5 hours in the future. And the cost of this is now having to be addressed due to the £30bn pension liability which means we all (not just the public sector) will have to pay more, work longer and receive less in retirement. We have to pay financially some how for our extra 5 hours a day.
While the public sector are losing their pensions linked to final salaries they are still retaining "defined benefits" even though this is changing to the lower "career average". This is still much better than the changes experienced by the private sector which has moved from "defined benefits" to "defined contributions" providing much more uncertainty for individuals in terms of what the market for annuity rates will be like at retirement age. The differential between public and private pensions still seems to have been maintained with the proposed reforms and we are now at last starting to address some of the very real issues of the ageing population.