Pension

DWP State Pension warning as thousands stuck in £5,000-a-year lost income trap


A State Pension warning has been issued as thousands are caught in a low-income retirement trap. Latest figures show it would currently cost the Department for Work and Pensions £860 million to fix the issue in the 2023-2024 financial year, rising to £940 million in 2024-2025 and £930 million in subsequent years.

Around £12.6 million people claim a State Pension, with most of those on the old Basic State Pension that existed prior to April 2017 and pays a maximum of £156.20 a week, equivalent to £8,122 a year. But almost half a million Brits live abroad and will only ever receive the amount paid when they relocated.




Half of those with a frozen pension are receiving a shockingly low pension of just £65 a week or less, a House of Lords member revealed this month during discussions centred on the 75th anniversary of the Windrush Generation. He said that equates to lost income each year of £5,000 or more.

READ MORE:

In guidance accompanying its updated calculations published last week, the DWP said: “UK state pensions for overseas residents are increased in line with the annual index-linked increases where there is a legal requirement to do so. An example of this is where there is a reciprocal agreement between the UK and the country of residence.

“As of March 2022, there were around 480,000 recipients of the UK State Pension living overseas who do not get State Pension increases – 84 per cent of those live in Australia, Canada and New Zealand.”

Lord Davies of Brixton has raised the issue of frozen pensions particularly affecting the Windrush Generation. He told the House of Lords on July 7: “The frozen pensions policy has had a deleterious effect on large numbers of those with a Windrush heritage – not all, of course, but that simply goes to point out the injustice of frozen pensions.



Source link

Leave a Response