infoman'Contracting out' was introduced when SERPS (State Earnings Related Pension) was introduced in 1978( and abolished in 2002).
SERPS was an additional state pension, which was a top-up to the basic state pension and for which you paid extra NI contributions if you earned above a certain wage. I think when it started in 1978, it affected those earning over £113 a week (£5876 a year).
This is what Wikipedia says on the subject
When the scheme was established, employers with final-salary pension schemes could choose to contract-out of SERPS, provided they gave scheme members a Guaranteed Minimum Pension. In return for opting out of SERPS the employer would pay reduced National Insurance contributions.
Later other people, mainly the self-employed and those whose employers did not run a pensions scheme, were also allowed to opt out for the first time. Instead of providing a Guaranteed Minimum Pension these schemes had to pay the saving in National Insurance contributions into an approved personal pension scheme. To encourage the take-up of this arrangement the government made an extra incentive payment into each pension scheme where somebody contracted out using this route.
So, as you can see the 'Contracted out' scheme never affected your entitlement to the full Basic pension, only your entitlement to SERPS, so your idea that it affected basic pension entitlement and low paid workers, is not correct, in fact just the opposite. The people most affected by contracting out it were those on average and upward wages.
Like Barmyoldbat I did well out of it. My state pension was dinted by the years I wasn't working because of domestic responsibilities before the scheme that enables women not working because of caring responsibilities to have their pension payments kept up, came into existence.
Voting. I’m so glad we still have the ‘old fashioned’ system…


