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Jimbuna 06-20-11 03:24 PM

Pensions Outrage In UK
 
It really annoys me that a political party (Lib Dems) with somewhere in the region of 55 seats (they're worst return in many a year) have so much influence on a subject that impacts on so many people that never voted for them) :nope:

Quote:

Iain Duncan Smith has faced cries of protest from MPs on all sides in announcing the government will press ahead with controversial plans to raise the state pension age for women.
The coalition wants to raise this from 60 to 65 by 2018 before both female and male pension ages rise to 66 in 2020.
Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-13834281

AVGWarhawk 06-20-11 03:49 PM

The US fiddles with the age concerning retirement all the time. Let see, I will need to reach 105 before I can retire with full benefits. :hmmm:

Jimbuna 06-20-11 04:11 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by AVGWarhawk (Post 1687753)
The US fiddles with the age concerning retirement all the time. Let see, I will need to reach 105 before I can retire with full benefits. :hmmm:

Is it really that bad....I'll soon have to reach 66 (up from 65) to receive a state pension and I thought that was bad :hmmm:

Betonov 06-20-11 04:21 PM

They tried to raise the retirement age from 60 to 65 in our country this year. People went berserk, syndicates threatened with revolution, students threatened with another revolt (last year a student riot left our parliament building with broken windows and a burned ornamental bush) until a referendum was issued. The reform was rejected

Jimbuna 06-20-11 04:23 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Betonov (Post 1687774)
They tried to raise the retirement age from 60 to 65 in our country this year. People went berserk, syndicates threatened with revolution, students threatened with another revolt (last year a student riot left our parliament building with broken windows and a burned ornamental bush) until a referendum was issued. The reform was rejected

I think we're a little more civilised than that in the UK :hmmm:

Or so the government tell us/hope :03:

Betonov 06-20-11 04:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jimbuna (Post 1687778)
I think we're a little more civilised than that in the UK :hmmm:

I thought you are from UK :06:

Edit: never mind, I read it wrong the first time :DL

Syndicates are a bit too powerfull here, they're playing the nostalgia card of our prevoius system. Trying to revert back to socialism and people follow them like sheep and if they say there will be riots than I expect a call from the civil defence to be on call. The truth is, they're a money grubbing pseudo labor organisation and if they'd do their jobs, we wouldn't be in this mess where we are today.

Damn it, saturday we are celebrating our 20th independence aniversary and people are running around with Socialist Yugoslavian flags

Penguin 06-20-11 05:15 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Betonov (Post 1687774)
They tried to raise the retirement age from 60 to 65 in our country this year. People went berserk, syndicates threatened with revolution, students threatened with another revolt (last year a student riot left our parliament building with broken windows and a burned ornamental bush) until a referendum was issued. The reform was rejected

They raised the pension age from 65 to 67 here in 2007. What did the Germans do? They voted again for the Christian Demoncrats who initiated it :damn: ...
Those damned sheeps here don't deserve it better...:nope:
The brave heroes of the Social Demoncrats who also voted for the raise were suddenly against it when they went into opposition. Really the true voice of the small man....:x

Skybird 06-20-11 05:59 PM

Somebody has to pay for all that people want to have in pensions and comfort. And the simple truth is demographics, debts, and the madness of the Euro trading away richer countries' future securities do not allow to pay for all that stuff anymore. There was party for half a century, and now the waiter has come to present the bill - and it is a nightmare number.

And what does that mean - "richer countries"? All Wetsern nations have lived for decades on tics, wastiong more money on tic than they could afford. Germany has black-on-white debts of almost 2 billion currently. If you calculate all future pesnions into it of people who at this very time earn or haver earned claims for fduture pensions, Germany's debts right now already are over 5 billion - one htird of that of the US, but with an economy and population not equalling one third of the US economy and population!

We have already consumed our children's and children's children's future. And in more than just finacial understandings of that phrase. Generation-wise, we have not been good parents over the past decades. We have been total azzes. And where the Argentinians have been ten years ago, and Greece is today, Germany will be in 10-15 years.

On the Greeks, it seems to me they do not search solutions and do not wish to understand how every single vote the private person made over the past 40 years has contributed to the mess they are in now. To me, there are no victims of the system, becasue the vast ,majority of Greek citizens particpated in the system as long as it held together and they did get their share. Instead of understanding this, they now instead look for foreign scapegoats. Today there was an article in the German press, describing the last reformer they had over 100 years ago who tried to reform the deeply corrupt political system Greece has traditionally. They lynched him.

jumpy 06-20-11 06:08 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Betonov (Post 1687781)
The truth is, they're a money grubbing pseudo labor organisation and if they'd do their jobs, we wouldn't be in this mess where we are today.

That just about sums up our government for the last ....ooh soooo many years now. You get used to it eventually until it doesn't really matter what they say or do or what we think of it, 'cause they'll only ignore us anyway.

What I fail to understand is where are all these jobs for the masses going to come from? Old people working longer, young people looking for jobs of their own, and everyone in-between in a declining mass labour market.
They've planned to cut national debt by including raising the state pension age as one means of trying to saving money - I think that all the government has planned for as far as the pension thing is concerned. Perhaps the private sector will step in and solve all our problems, you know, like they did once before...? :haha:

Penguin 06-20-11 06:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jumpy (Post 1687827)
What I fail to understand is where are all these jobs for the masses going to come from? Old people working longer, young people looking for jobs of their own, and everyone in-between in a declining mass labour market.

The employment level of people over 50 is 50% here... But the government still thinks in this 1950s utopia of full-employment. Everyone is waiting for the labour fairy who magically will make a job wonder.

Quote:

Originally Posted by jumpy (Post 1687827)
They've planned to cut national debt by including raising the state pension age as one means of trying to saving money - I think that all the government has planned for as far as the pension thing is concerned.

Seems that the Krauts voted for the same geniuses...

Bakkels 06-20-11 07:15 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jimbuna (Post 1687733)
It really annoys me that a political party (Lib Dems) with somewhere in the region of 55 seats (they're worst return in many a year) have so much influence on a subject that impacts on so many people that never voted for them) :nope:



Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-13834281


Eehm, not to be a pain, but first of all, you have different pensions ages for women and men in the UK? I find that kind of weird in the first place.
And it's 60 for women? Well I'm sorry but raising that age only seems a good thing to me.
Over here the pension age just got raised a year ago. Yes there were some protests, but the bill made it through parliament. And I got to say, it's only natural. In the 50's, a very famous social-democrat prime-minister here introduced pensions, a standard pension for elderly people and general health care. Socialist as he was, even he said (back in the fifties, that is) that the pension age should rise to compensate for the increased life-expectancy.

The only problem I see is that it's now going to be introduced in one large operation. And that it's going to affect the generation after the baby-boomers. Not the baby-boomers themselves.
They should have started slightly increasing it from the get-go. Still, it's now been raised from 65 to 67. I have no objection to that. I have some objections against other cut-backs, but the increase of pension age? It's only a logical consequence of increasing life-expectancy.

I can tell you this much though; it's going to be a way bigger problem in Southern Europe. The pension ages in Italy, Spain and Greece are much lower. And those countries are faced with an even larger ageing of the population.

AVGWarhawk 06-20-11 08:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jimbuna (Post 1687767)
Is it really that bad....I'll soon have to reach 66 (up from 65) to receive a state pension and I thought that was bad :hmmm:


One can retire at age 62 but benefits are less. Age 67 full benefits are offered.

Tribesman 06-21-11 02:25 AM

Quote:

Eehm, not to be a pain, but first of all, you have different pensions ages for women and men in the UK? I find that kind of weird in the first place.
It goes back a long time.
An equality case was bought which of course resulted in adding 5 years to the womens retirement age to make all things equal.
But that wouldn't be fair on a woman who was 59 and was about to retire so they stretched the timeframe for implementation, but 5 years is a lot of change so you have to stretch it down to be fair to 55 year olds which isn't fair on 54 year olds so you have to stretch it and they have been argueing for two decades on how long to keep stretching.

BossMark 06-21-11 04:00 AM

As an ex coal miner I think I can claim my pit pension when I am 50, but not so sure now. I have never voted Lib Dem and have no intention of ever doing so(I am a member of the Labour party) what they are doing is an absolute outrage and come the next general election it will serve them right when hopefully they will get less than 10 seats.

Jimbuna 06-21-11 05:09 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BossMark (Post 1687974)
As an ex coal miner I think I can claim my pit pension when I am 50, but not so sure now. I have never voted Lib Dem and have no intention of ever doing so(I am a member of the Labour party) what they are doing is an absolute outrage and come the next general election it will serve them right when hopefully they will get less than 10 seats.

Coal minor eh? :hmmm:

I'm a retired cop...pleased to meet you, again :DL

Back on a serious note....I drew my force pension at 50 but this topic is about state/age related pension :03:


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