Documents obtained by this newsroom reveal a crisis beneath the surface of Britain's retirement landscape. Three out of every four workers are on course for a pension income that falls short of a minimum living standard, according to a confidential analysis commissioned by the Department for Work and Pensions. The report, marked 'sensitive', warns that auto-enrolment, the flagship policy designed to force savings, is failing the very people it was meant to protect.
Sources confirm the Treasury has been quietly handed the dossier, which projects that by 2050, the average worker will retire on an income 40 per cent below the threshold deemed necessary for a 'moderate' retirement as defined by the Pension and Lifetime Savings Association. That threshold currently stands at £23,000 a year for a single person. For the lowest earners, the gap is even more stark: they are on track for less than £10,000 annually.
The numbers are stark. Under current contribution rates, a 22-year-old earning £25,000 today will accumulate a pension pot of just over £180,000 by age 68. That translates to an annual income of roughly £12,000. The cost of a basic retirement is pegged at £10,900, leaving a margin so thin it could be wiped out by a single unexpected expense. Those earning less than £20,000 are almost certain to fall into poverty in old age.
Ministers have been urged to act. The leaked document recommends raising the mandatory contribution rate from the current 8 per cent of earnings to 12 per cent, phased in over five years. It also suggests lowering the age for auto-enrolment from 22 to 18 and removing the lower earnings limit that currently excludes the lowest paid from the scheme entirely.
But the political cost is high. Raising contributions would hit take-home pay in the middle of a cost-of-living crisis. The Treasury, already under pressure to manage public finances, has been reluctant to force the issue. A source close to the Chancellor said: 'The timing is not ideal. But the alternative is a generation of retirees who can't afford to heat their homes.'
The pension industry is quietly livid. Insiders confirm that the current system is a 'ticking time bomb'. One actuary who worked on the modelling said: 'Auto-enrolment was sold as a silver bullet. It's not even a pellet. We're storing up misery.' The Association of British Insurers has repeatedly called for reform, but Whitehall has stalled.
Meanwhile, the private sector is already adapting. A growing number of employers are offering 'pension-plus' schemes that top up contributions, but these remain the exception. The majority of workers are stuck in default funds with high fees and low returns.
The question is whether the government will act before the next election. The report includes a foreword from the Pensions Minister, who writes: 'We cannot kick this can down the road. The road is running out.' But sources indicate that internal briefings have been quiet on specific legislative commitments.
For the millions of Britons who have been dutifully paying in, the message is clear: your pension is a promise that may not be kept. The Treasury has until the end of the year to respond. If it fails to act, the only guarantee is that the retirement crisis will become the defining economic scandal of the 2020s.








