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joint pensions-I'm outraged.
Comments
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Mrs Andrew4444 - when you get your pension forecast, make sure your full HRP is there (it was introduced on 6 Apr 1978) for the time you were a 'stay at home Mum'.
My forecast 'lost' 15 years of mine which meant I wouldn't be entitled to a full pension! Bit of to-ing and fro-ing and some form filling but thankfully the Pension Service agreed that I was entitled to it and it miraculously appeared. New forecast shows full pension in my own right.0 -
Well done sagalout, how nice for you! I had a pleasant surprise when I got my first forecast in 2004, because I didn't know about HRP and assumed I'd be years short for my pension. It was great to find I only had to make up two years.(AKA HRH_MUngo)
Member #10 of £2 savers club
Imagine someone holding forth on biology whose only knowledge of the subject is the Book of British Birds, and you have a rough idea of what it feels like to read Richard Dawkins on theology: Terry Eagleton0 -
I beleive I'm right in saying that you don't get HRP if you worked part time, or part of a year. Hence I missed out on that. Deferring my state pension brought me a good increase though which helped to compensate.0
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You can still get HRP if you work part-time if you do not earn enough to pay NI. During most of the 13 years for which I have been granted NI, I was employed as a lollipop lady.
(AKA HRH_MUngo)
Member #10 of £2 savers club
Imagine someone holding forth on biology whose only knowledge of the subject is the Book of British Birds, and you have a rough idea of what it feels like to read Richard Dawkins on theology: Terry Eagleton0 -
Newly_retired wrote: »I beleive I'm right in saying that you don't get HRP if you worked part time, or part of a year. Hence I missed out on that. Deferring my state pension brought me a good increase though which helped to compensate.
I have a feeling it's working part of the year, or swapping who claims the Child Benefit part way through a year, which clobbers the HRP payments. For some reason I think they are only paid if you are eligible for a full year.seven-day-weekend wrote: »You can still get HRP if you work part-time if you do not earn enough to pay NI. During most of the 13 years for which I have been granted NI, I was employed as a lollipop lady.
Signature removed for peace of mind0 -
There is an injustice here however even though it is not the one originally quoted.
If one partner works a lifetime and the other does not, then on retirement a couple’s pension is awarded. But if the non-working spouse did in fact pay sufficient contributions to gain a pension in their own right then the couple’s pension, which would have been given, would then be downgraded to a single person’s pension.0 -
I don't see this. The so-called 'couple's pension' is 160% i.e. one gets 100% from contributions, the non-working spouse gets 60% of that.
If both have contributed then both get a pension in their own right, 100% each, 200% for the couple in fact.
DH and I both contributed and both get pension in our own right i.e. we each get 100%. Actually it's more than that, because SERPS/S2P is added. I don't see where the 'downgrading' comes in.[FONT=Times New Roman, serif]Æ[/FONT]r ic wisdom funde, [FONT=Times New Roman, serif]æ[/FONT]r wear[FONT=Times New Roman, serif]ð[/FONT] ic eald.
Before I found wisdom, I became old.0 -
margaretclare wrote: »I don't see this. The so-called 'couple's pension' is 160% i.e. one gets 100% from contributions, the non-working spouse gets 60% of that.
If both have contributed then both get a pension in their own right, 100% each, 200% for the couple in fact.
DH and I both contributed and both get pension in our own right i.e. we each get 100%. Actually it's more than that, because SERPS/S2P is added. I don't see where the 'downgrading' comes in.
The injustice is simple. If one partner works and pays full contributions, you get 160% between you. If you both work (and therefore pay twice as much), you only get 200% between you ie. 25% more for 100% more contributions.0 -
There is an injustice here however even though it is not the one originally quoted.
If one partner works a lifetime and the other does not, then on retirement a couple’s pension is awarded. But if the non-working spouse did in fact pay sufficient contributions to gain a pension in their own right then the couple’s pension, which would have been given, would then be downgraded to a single person’s pension.
If each person has paid in their own right, they will each get a full pension i.e. two single person's pensions.
If one has not paid enough they will get one full pension and one 60% pension, i.e. one and two-thirds single person's pensions.
I don't quite see how that is an injustice?(AKA HRH_MUngo)
Member #10 of £2 savers club
Imagine someone holding forth on biology whose only knowledge of the subject is the Book of British Birds, and you have a rough idea of what it feels like to read Richard Dawkins on theology: Terry Eagleton0 -
The injustice is simple. If one partner works and pays full contributions, you get 160% between you. If you both work (and therefore pay twice as much), you only get 200% between you ie. 25% more for 100% more contributions.
Right I see where you are coming from now, only 25% more for paying in all your life than someone who has never paid a penny.
This is how it always is though, isn't it?.
I don't see what can be done about it really. People need to have enough to live on.(AKA HRH_MUngo)
Member #10 of £2 savers club
Imagine someone holding forth on biology whose only knowledge of the subject is the Book of British Birds, and you have a rough idea of what it feels like to read Richard Dawkins on theology: Terry Eagleton0
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