Plus: this trick could solve your pension problem – cash now and income for life
Wednesday, October 2, 2019 |
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Telegraph Money | The week's most important personal finance news, analysis and expert advice, from pensions and property to investment ideas and savings tips. |
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The Telegraph take | By Stephanie Baxter Deputy personal finance editor |
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Saving into a workplace or personal pension fund is the best way to build up a big enough pot of money to last your retirement. With tax relief on pension contributions, it should be a no-brainer. But pensions seem to have an image problem among the self-employed. The number of people working for themselves who invest in personal pensions has dropped by almost a third over the past four years to 410,000, according to HM Revenue & Customs. These are worrying figures if we consider the boom in self-employment. In 2001, 3.3 million people were counted as working for themselves; it shot up to nearly five million last year. The problem is there is no obligation to provide the self-employed with pensions. They can use personal pensions to save for retirement but this is their own active decision. This is a far cry from rules in the workplace, where all companies must provide their employees with pensions, putting in 3pc of salary out of their own pocket while staff have to pay 5pc. Employees are automatically enrolled into these pensions, whereas the self-employed are not. The Government has looked at how to avoid a self-employed pensions crisis but has failed to come up with a solution so far. It must urgently address this savings gap – particularly as the number of self-employed people continues to rise. The state pension will increase by 4pc next April – but even the new gold-plated payout of 175.35 per week will not be enough to financially support people in retirement. Until the Government comes up with a proper solution for self-employed people, these entrepreneurs and business owners must take matters into their own hands and make sure they have enough put aside to fund their later life. Find out about how to save for your retirement, and get tips and advice on the Telegraph website, where you can subscribe for just 2 a week. It's free for 30 days. Try it here. |
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You have the last word... |
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Martin Walker says of 'Holiday prices soar for Thomas Cook customers trying to rebook': "I had a one-way flight booked and was scheduled to fly from Arrecife to Glasgow towards the end of October. These were not ATOL protected. The opportunistic behaviour of some of the competitors in the wake of these unfortunate circumstances is shameful, in my opinion – prices quadrupled over the course of the weekend! I'm self-employed, so fortunately have the flexibility to delay my return to mid-week, when flights are normally cheaper anyway and will be travelling home with Vueling via Barcelona. I pity those who must return to re-start the working week on time and who are being forced to pay such exorbitant and cynically inflated, exploitative fares!" William Wilson says of 'Stoptober: how quitting cigarettes can make you 60k': "I quit a 40 a day habit 40 years ago. At today's prices, I reckon that's about 321,000 saved. Funny thing is, I can't figure out where that's all gone..." Fraser Bailey says of 'How I cut my Sky bill by a third – and got the film channels thrown in for free': "I cut my Sky bill by 100pc by ending my subscription - as long ago as 1993. I literally took the box to the local office and dumped it on their desk. I subsequently cut my TV license bill by 100pc by throwing out the TV, as long ago as 2000. Actually I never paid a license fee, one way or another, and I wasn't about to start when I moved into a new place in 2000. Why anyone would have a TV or subscribe to anything in the age of YouTube is beyond me!"
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