Quote Search
Car Insurance Travel Insurance Home Insurance Life Insurance Health Insurance
Keyword Search
Articles

AA

Abbey National

Admiral

Alliance & Leicester

AXA

Banking

Barclaycard 

Barclays 

Bradford and Bingley

Cahoot

Churchill 

CIC 

Confused.com 

Cooperative 

Cornhill Direct

Credit cards

Debt

Direct Choice 

Direct Line 

Egg 

Endsleigh 

Esure 

Finance Features

General finance

Halifax 

Hastings Direct 

Housing Market

Housing market

HSBC 

Insurance

Insure.co.uk 

Kwik Fit 

Labworks

Legal and General

Liverpool Victoria 

LloydsTSB 

Loans

Loans

Lombard Direct 

Mastercard

Mint

More Than 

Mortgages

Nationwide

NatWest 

NFU Mutual 

Norwich Union 

Other

Pensions

Personal loans

Post Office

Products

Providers

Prudential 

RAC 

Saga 

Sainsbury

Smile

Swinton 

Tesco 

Woolwich

Zurich
Sections

Car Insurance

Travel Insurance

Home Insurance

Life Insurance

Health Insurance

Personal Finance News

Copyright Notice
As Featured on NewsNow

UK residents worried about stakeholder pensions

Over 7 million people in the UK are still not putting aside any money to cover their retirement.

A report compiled by the Association of British Insurers has found that 7.4 million employees were falling an estimated £27 billion short of preparing for old age, even though there has been an increase in the proportion of people who accept it is their responsibility to do so.

Joanne Segars ABI's head of pensions, said: "These findings will confound those who argue that the public does not accept the severity of the pensions challenge or is unwilling to face the consequences."

Nonetheless, despite 42 per cent now admitting it is up to them to put money aside, millions were not doing so.

One problem, the ABI suggests, is the reliance by the government on the current means tested pensioner's credit.

ABI chairman Richard Harvey is expected to tell a conference on the issue: "People simply do not know whether they are pouring their hard-earned cash down the drain bysaving in a stakeholder pension because, by the time they get to retirement, they would be no better off [than someone] . . . who got means-tested benefits."

The findings compound those of the Pensions Commission which reported last month that pensions contributions from employers were also falling short of the predicted need by as much as £57 billion.