Neil G
Old School Grand Master
Easy_Rider":2ogtd2wi said:brocklanders023":2ogtd2wi said:Neil G":2ogtd2wi said:Well I'm thinking about not even having one at all...be better off investing elsewhere for a better return!
That's exactly what me and a lot of my work mates are thinking with ours due to the fact the proposed changes are just the start. If we give in now my pension will be worth bugger all by the time I get to retire so the £250/300 I pay a month could be put to better use.
If only a small percentage of the public service workers do this the ps pension will be in far worse trouble then it is now.
Personally I think it would be silly to give up the pension. I think it's only fair that if people are projected to live longer then more money should be paid into the pot to provide for that. The £250/300 a month is still more than doubled after the state pays their contribution, so for me to be anywhere near that pension I would need to put in £700 a month and I don't know how that would work with tax and percentage of income paid into a pension.
I think traditionally public sector workers were offered very good pensions because the pay was significantly less than private sector euivilants, that gap has closed and in some cases gone the other way in the last decade or so.
By all means let them fight to keep what they have, doesn't mean I have to agree with it.
It upsets me to see ordinary private sector people struggling on very low wages and with no chance of their own pension fund having some of their taxes going to these more than generous public sector pension funds, and these public sector people are asked to pay more into the fund as everyone is going to live longer than we all thought to strike about it before any real negotiating, so the rest of the private sector will have to cover the shortfall and with even less chance of their own fund.
Agree
I can barely afford £50 a month let alone hundreds. F**ked by inflation and paying the price for the a**holes that went rampant borrowing in the 'good times'.
Preference shares are where it's at for a nice inflation beating 8/9 percent return
