Allira
^I completely understand that, but to take the jam today then complain it’s not there tomorrow is disingenuous, surely?^
Who is complaining if there was indeed a choice?
No-one that I can tell.
In the case of Civil Servants it wasn't a choice anyway, it was just returned in the final salary.
There are numerous complaints on here that there is a 2-tier state pension, along with further complaints that those on the OSP get less than those on the new one.
My point is that this is not true. Some on the OSP get less than some on the new, but it is also true that some on OSP get a lot more than those on even the full rate of the NSP, an by no means everyone on the NSP gets the full amount.
There are also complaints about the fact (which I am not disputing) that many women were encouraged to pay lower rates of NI on marriage, and/or to take back their superannuation payments, which reduced their pension later on. My own recollections of the superannuation scheme are that it had nothing to do with marriage or babies (although they may have been the most usual reasons for women getting the money) but was offered to all (male or female) who had fewer than X years' service when they left. It was, when I claimed mine in approx 1978, optional, and it was always an option to pay the full NI rate, even though it may not have been easily afforded.
I understand people regretting those decisions, and I fully understand that few people in their 20s are looking ahead to retirement, but I don't understand why people would expect gifts from the government or their employer in the form of cheaper NI and a 'bonus' payment just for getting married. It doesn't make sense.
If decisions about superannuation were made without consent or explanation before 'my day', there is a case for setting up a pressure group to have occupational pensions topped up to what they would have been had the money stayed put. In my own case I was leaving the CS, and had only accrued about three years worth of payments made on a junior salary, so even after all this time it would be a few pounds a year, but for those on higher salaries it could be more.
Lower NI payments were definitely optional. I know some women who chose to make them and others who decided against. How would it be fair to the latter group to make up the pensions of the former to the same level? The lower payments continued after the scheme was scrapped, so a significant amount would have been saved by those making that choice. It would not be fair to ignore that, and increase their pension to the same level as colleagues who would also have had high mortgages and expenses, but chose to pay the higher rate. As I've said, the scheme was in place when I started work, but not when I married, and there was a lot of talk about it when it was about to be scrapped, so although I didn't make the choice myself I was part of several conversations about it.