A generation of British savers is waking up to a cruel arithmetic: the retirement they funded for decades is evaporating before their eyes. The pension income crisis, long predicted by actuaries and data modellers, has now fully materialised in the real economy. Across the country, hundreds of thousands of individuals are discovering that their carefully accumulated pots will yield far less than they need to live on. The root cause is a perfect storm of low interest rates, soaring inflation, and the unintended consequences of pension freedom reforms that shifted risk from institutions to individuals. The UK Treasury is now facing urgent calls to intervene, but the window for a soft landing is closing fast.
Let me be clear: this is not a bug in the system. It is a feature of a financial architecture designed in an era of predictable growth and stable demographics. We are now in a world of volatile markets, ageing populations, and algorithmic trading that amplifies every shock. The pension model has not kept pace. For someone retiring today with a defined contribution pot of £100,000, the annuity income is a paltry £5,000 a year. That is £416 a month. You cannot rent a room in most UK cities for that, let alone cover heating and food. The human cost is visible in the queues at food banks and the rising number of elderly applying for council tax support.
The data is stark. According to the Office for National Statistics, the number of over-65s in poverty has increased by 12% in the last two years. The Institute for Fiscal Studies warns that those retiring in the next decade will see their incomes fall by up to 20% in real terms compared to the previous cohort. This is a systemic failure that no amount of financial literacy training can fix. The pension dashboard, promised for years, will only show people how poor they are. It does not create wealth.
The Treasury’s response so far has been to tinker with allowances and extend the money purchase annual allowance, but these are sticking plasters on a haemorrhage. The real issue is that the state pension, while rising with the triple lock, is not enough to live on, and private provision has collapsed as employer contributions remain low and investment returns disappoint. The shift from final salary to defined contribution schemes has transferred all market risk onto the saver. When markets fall, pensions fall. And markets have been falling, in real terms, for years.
What needs to happen? We need a fundamental rethink of the social contract around retirement. The Treasury should consider a sovereign pension fund, similar to Norway’s Government Pension Fund Global, which would pool contributions and invest for the long term, smoothing out volatility and capturing growth from the UK’s own assets. We also need auto-enrolment contributions to rise from 8% to at least 12% as soon as possible, and the earnings trigger should be lowered to include more part-time workers. Most importantly, we need a national pension commission that can oversee this transition with the independence of the Monetary Policy Committee, setting targets for adequacy and sustainability free from short-term political cycles.
But technology can play a role too. We should leverage open banking and pension dashboards to provide real-time income projections, nudging savers to increase contributions when they hit career milestones. Behavioural fintech can help people make better decisions, but only if the underlying products are fit for purpose. An algorithm that shows you how poor you will be is useless if the only solution is ‘save more’ when wages are stagnant.
The crisis is not inevitable. We have the data, the tools, and the capital. What we lack is political will. The Chancellor must act now, not with a budget line item, but with a comprehensive strategy that rebuilds trust in the pension system. Otherwise, we are looking at a generation of elderly poverty that the state cannot afford to support. This is not a Black Mirror episode. This is the reality for millions of Britons who played by the rules. It is time the system played by theirs.










