The numbers are stark, and they do not lie. A new report from the Pensions Policy Institute has dropped a bombshell: 76% of UK workers are not on track to achieve a 'moderate' income in retirement. For those keeping score at home, that is roughly three out of every four employees staring down a future of financial insecurity.
Let us be clear about what 'moderate' means. According to the Pensions and Lifetime Savings Association, a single person needs £23,300 a year for a moderate retirement lifestyle. That is not luxury. That is not caviar and cruises. That is a reliable car, a holiday in Europe, and the occasional meal out. And three-quarters of the workforce are set to fall short of that bar. It is a damning indictment of decades of pension policy and personal savings habits.
To put it in market terms, the UK's retirement savings machine is suffering a catastrophic liquidity crisis. The assets are simply not there to meet the liabilities. The defined benefit schemes of yesteryear have largely been replaced by defined contribution plans, shifting the investment risk squarely onto the individual. And individuals, as we know, are notoriously bad at long-term financial planning. The behavioural economics literature is replete with examples of hyperbolic discounting and present bias. We spend today and hope for tomorrow. But hope is not a strategy.
The report highlights that auto-enrolment, while a step in the right direction, is not moving the needle enough. Minimum contribution rates of 8% are simply inadequate when the required savings rate for a moderate income is closer to 12% or 15% for many workers. It is akin to trying to fill a bathtub with a teacup while the plug is half out. The government's decision to freeze the auto-enrolment earnings threshold at £10,000 means millions of low earners are effectively locked out of the system. Meanwhile, the state pension, while rising with the triple lock, provides only a basic floor. At around £10,600 a year, it barely covers the essentials.
The troubling undercurrent here is the generational inequity. Younger workers, already grappling with sky-high house prices and stagnant wages, are being asked to save more for retirement while simultaneously seeing the goalposts shift. The retirement age is rising. The state pension is becoming less generous relative to earnings. And investment returns, once the saviour of long-term savers, are being eroded by low yields and high inflation. A 20-year-old today faces a much steeper uphill climb than their parents did.
And let's talk about inflation. The stealth tax that erodes purchasing power. With CPI stubbornly above 2%, the real value of savings is being pared away daily. If you are invested in a default auto-enrolment fund, the typical charge of 0.75% may not sound like much, but compounded over 40 years, it eats into returns significantly. The Financial Conduct Authority's push for value for money is welcome, but it is a regulatory sticking plaster on a structural wound.
The government will likely point to the success of auto-enrolment in increasing pension participation. And yes, opt-out rates are low. But participation is not the same as adequacy. We are filling the stadium, but the seats are getting cheaper. The Treasury must grapple with the uncomfortable truth that the current system is storing up immense future liabilities. When these workers retire, they will fall back on the state, whether through pension credit, housing benefit, or social care. That is a fiscal time bomb.
For the individual, the message is clear: you cannot rely on the state, and you cannot rely on your employer. You must take control. Increase contributions where possible. Seek advice. Diversify. But for many, especially those on low incomes, this advice is as useful as telling someone to pull themselves up by their bootstraps when they have no boots.
The report's findings should serve as a wake-up call, but I fear it will fall on deaf ears. The City will see this as an opportunity to peddle more expensive products. The government will kick the can down the road with a review. And the great British worker will carry on, burying their head in the sand. The maths is simple: save more or retire poor. The choice is yours, but the clock is ticking.









