A new report has laid bare a retirement savings crisis in the UK, with nearly three-quarters of workers on track to fall short of a moderate pension income. The document, obtained by this newsroom, paints a grim picture of financial insecurity for millions. The Pensions Policy Institute’s analysis shows that only 27 per cent of employees are expected to achieve the Pension and Lifetime Savings Association’s “moderate” retirement living standard. That leaves 73 per cent facing a shortfall, a figure that should ring alarm bells from Westminster to Wall Street.
The report defines a moderate income as £23,300 a year for a single person or £34,000 for a couple. It covers the essentials plus some financial flexibility for holidays, hobbies, and the occasional treat. For many, that will remain a distant dream. The data exposes a stark divide: those in defined benefit schemes, often public sector workers, are far more likely to hit the target, while private sector employees relying on defined contribution plans are left exposed.
“The headline numbers are a wake-up call,” a pensions expert close to the report’s authors told me. “We have a system that works for those with gold-plated pensions, but for the rest, it is a lottery. The reality is that millions will be forced to work longer or accept a lower standard of living.”
The report’s timing is no accident. It comes as the government reviews auto-enrolment rules, which currently require a minimum contribution of 8 per cent of earnings. Critics argue that is far too low to build a decent pot. The Pensions Policy Institute’s analysis assumes current contribution rates remain unchanged. If they do, the gap will only widen. A single person on a median salary of £35,000 would need to save nearly 15 per cent of earnings to hit the moderate target. Most are nowhere near that.
I have seen this story before. It is a slow-motion train wreck of inaction and finger-pointing. Ministers blame employers for not paying more. Employers point to rising costs. And workers, many of whom are already squeezed by the cost-of-living crisis, are left to shoulder the burden. Meanwhile, the financial services industry profits from opaque charges and complex products that leave savers bamboozled.
What is missing here is political will. The government’s own figures show that pensioner poverty is on the rise, and this report confirms that the safety net is full of holes. The state pension alone barely covers survival. To achieve even a modest retirement, workers must rely on private savings. But the system is rigged in favour of those who can afford advice and higher contributions. The rest are left to gamble on a pot of gold that never arrives.
The report’s authors recommend a gradual increase in minimum contributions to 12 per cent, with a third from employers, a third from employees, and a third from tax relief. They also call for a cap on charges and better financial education. But these are not new ideas. They have been gathering dust on Whitehall shelves for years. The question is whether this latest warning will finally force a change.
Until it does, the numbers speak for themselves. Three out of four workers heading for a lean retirement. A system that fails the many to serve the few. And a government that has yet to show it cares enough to act. The clock is ticking. Every year of delay locks in another cohort’s poverty.
Sources: Pensions Policy Institute report. Insider interviews with pensions analysts. Treasury documents reviewed by this reporter.








