Press Release - The cost of public
service pensions
12 March 2010
There has been much public discussion about the affordability of
public service pensions. To inform that debate, the National Audit
Office has today published a report designed to bring greater
transparency to, and understanding of, the cash costs involved.
Today’s report found:
- Total payments to more than 2 million pensioners in the UK’s
four largest pay-as-you-go pension schemes (also known as unfunded
schemes – where current employee and employer contributions are
used to pay current pensions) were £19.3 billion in 2008-09, a real
terms increase of 38 per cent since 1999-2000. This is driven by
more employees retiring each year, which is a substantially more
significant factor than longer lifespans.
- Employee contributions of £4.4 billion reduced the taxpayer’s
share of costs to £14.9 billion in 2008-09. The employee element
grew by 56 per cent in real terms since 1999-2000 because staff
numbers and contribution rates have increased.
Today’s report also looked at projections of payments across all
UK public sector pay-as-you-go pension schemes over the next fifty
years. The report found:
- Expressed in terms of constant 2008-09 prices, the Government
Actuary’s Department projects total payments rising to over £79
billion a year by 2059-60. This is before allowing for income from
employee contributions.
- Expressed in terms that track earnings, which rise more quickly
than prices, projected payments reach £28.8 billion by
2059-60.
- However, expressed as a proportion of GDP, the projected
increase is less stark, as GDP is also assumed to rise. Projected
payments are estimated to reach a peak of 1.9 per cent of GDP
between 2018-19 and 2033-34 then fall to 1.7 per cent by 2059-60.
This compares with a rise from around 1.5 per cent to 1.7 per cent
over the last decade.
Estimates of future payments depend on assumptions (covering
matters such as life expectancy, earnings growth, the size of the
public sector workforce and recent changes to contain costs) used
as the basis of calculations. Changes to these assumptions can have
a large impact on the projections. The Treasury has a reasonable
framework in place for assessing future costs and has undertaken
some analysis on the sensitivity of projections to changes in key
assumptions. However, the Treasury has not undertaken any
systematic analysis of the effects of changing its assumption that
there will be zero public service headcount growth, despite the
existence of several factors that could put upwards pressure on
staff numbers in the long term.
The NAO will publish a second report later this year examining
the impact of recent changes on the overall cost of the UK public
service pay-as-you-go pension schemes.
Mr Amyas Morse, head of the National Audit Office, said
today:
"My report today sets out clearly the facts surrounding
current cash payments from the public service pay-as-you-go pension
schemes and the basis for future projections of these payments. The
Treasury has performed some analysis on the sensitivity of its
projections to changing assumptions, but has not considered the
potentially significant effects of changes in the size of the
public service workforce.
"Later this year I intend to report to Parliament on
recent changes to the schemes, which are designed partly to reduce
costs."
Notes for Editors
- The four largest pay-as-you-go public service pension schemes
in the UK are: the Armed Forces Pension Scheme (covering the United
Kingdom), the Principal Civil Service Pension Scheme (for England,
Wales, Scotland and some employees in Northern Ireland), the NHS
Pension Scheme (for England and Wales) and the Teachers’ Pension
Scheme (for England and Wales).
- Press notices and reports are available from the date of
publication on the NAO website, which is at www.nao.org.uk. Hard
copies can be obtained from The Stationery Office on 0845 702
3474.
- The Comptroller and Auditor General, Amyas Morse, is the head
of the National Audit Office which employs some 900 staff. He and
the NAO are totally independent of Government. He certifies the
accounts of all Government departments and a wide range of other
public sector bodies; and he has statutory authority to report to
Parliament on the economy, efficiency and effectiveness with which
departments and other bodies have used their resources.
Press Notice 16/10
All enquiries to Phil
Groves, NAO Press Office:
Tel: 020 7798 5339
Mobile: 07770
678477