In a development that would have made Gibbon weep and Macaulay smirk, the Financial Conduct Authority has issued a stern warning: millions of Britons are saving for retirement without the faintest clue what they are doing. This is not a revelation but a confirmation of a creeping national malady. We have become a people who tick boxes, who throw money at pension funds with the same blind faith that medievals tossed coins into holy wells.
The FCA’s alert reveals that a significant portion of savers do not understand basic investment concepts, conflating “risk” with “guaranteed return” and treating workplace pensions as a kind of magical deposit box that will somehow produce gold from straw. The statistics are damning: two in five savers cannot identify the difference between a stocks and shares ISA and a cash ISA. One in three thinks their pension contributions are a legal obligation rather than a voluntary act of prudence.
This is intellectual decadence dressed in sensible shoes. We have outsourced our financial futures to algorithms and auto-enrolment, believing that the mere act of saving is sufficient. It is not.
The Victorians, for all their moralising, understood that thrift required discipline and knowledge. They founded building societies and mutual funds that educated their members. Today, we have robo-advisers that pat us on the head for setting aside a few pounds.
The FCA’s warning is a cry in the wilderness, but who will listen? The same generation that cannot read a pension statement is the generation that will riot when the state pension age rises. We are sleepwalking into a retirement crisis, and the watchdog has only confirmed what any discerning observer knew: we are a nation of financial illiterates, saving blindly for a future we refuse to imagine.








