All workers to be automatically enrolled into a pension scheme by mid-2020s, minister confirms
LOW-INCOME workers will get a retirement savings boost from the mid-2020s, the pensions minister has confirmed.
Bosses have had to automatically enrol staff into pension schemes since October 2012 to get workers saving for their golden years.
Responding to a question by The Sun about whether there are plans for a threshold reduction, Mr Opperman said: "The answer is yes.
"We'll be implementing it by the mid-2020s."
It comes after a government review in 2017 recommended the change to boost UK households' retirement savings.
Since then, the plan has been mentioned frequently in government reviews.
When saving into a workplace pension, employers must contribute at least 3% a month into an employee's pension based on their earnings.
This is on top of the 5% an employee contributes to a pension scheme from their wages before tax.
However, research has found that around 2.5million workers are missing out on employer top-ups because they don't earn enough to qualify.
NOW: Pensions warned in December that this particularly affects "under-pensioned" groups such as single mothers, divorced women, ethnic minorities and people with disabilities, carers and the self-employed.
During the PLSA speech, Mr Opperman also announced a consultation into a simpler yearly pension statement for workplace schemes.
This will make it easier for savers to keep track of their retirement cash, and to find out whether they're on course for the pension they wish for.
A pension fee shake-up is set to make it cheaper for hundreds of thousands of auto-enrolment savers.
Meanwhile, young women today will typically need to work nearly 40 years longer than men to get the same pension pots, calculations reveal.
Martin Lewis recently explained seven things you need to know about your pension including a clever trick to work out how much to save.