Opinion  

'Autumn Statement: now was not the time to tweak the triple lock'

Paul Waters

Paul Waters

The triple lock could become one of those very rare things in recent history with government pension policy: an enduring feature that delivers over the long term to drive better retirement outcomes without being tampered with. 

Introduced by the Conservative/Liberal Democrat coalition government in 2010, you could make an argument for it being as important as auto-enrolment, which followed in 2012, at least in the sense that it protects the whole retirement population rather than only those eligible for a workplace pension.

Its critics would argue that successive increases of 10.1 per cent in April 2023 followed by the 8.5 per cent announced yesterday to follow in April 2024 are unreasonably high compared to other benefits, unaffordable relative to other spending commitments, or both.

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While we do have long-term affordability challenges with the state pension, to draw comparisons between government spending priorities is a fool’s errand and risks undermining the importance of the triple lock today.

The UK has one of the lowest state pensions across the OECD. We rank 28th out of 38 for spend on old age pensions as a percentage of GDP, and when measuring pensioner poverty are placed 23rd out of 35 OECD countries measured.

The triple lock is serving an important role in providing meaningful increases to UK pensioners, helping protect the most vulnerable as cost of living increases soar. 

Our analysis shows that because of the triple lock, the April 2024 state pension is more than 10 per cent higher than it otherwise would have been if just inflationary increases had been applied to it since 2010.  

Focusing on the metric used for calculating the annual increases misses the point. Our state pension is starting from a low rate and the current policy at least goes some way to mitigate this, although not by deliberate design.

Inflation is falling and the Office for Budget Responsibility has cut its forecast for UK growth rates to 0.7 per cent in 2024 and 1.4 per cent in 2025. Future increases are likely to be lower, and when factoring in the pause in the triple lock for Covid this period undoubtedly has some lumpy data points. 

If the government is looking to manage increases in a less blunt way, a fairer approach may be to adjust the earnings increase criteria to account for increases over a longer period, which would align employment and pensioner income increases more closely.

What is really needed is a clear policy for our long-term state pension provision, developed with cross-party political consensus and a long-term commitment to its implementation. 

This should use income replacement rates (pension income as a percentage of previous earnings), and be assessed alongside auto-enrolment contribution levels to deliver a reasonable pension for the average UK earner. 

With this framework established, sensible policy decisions can be taken around: