Can I have this deal?
Jan. 8th, 2009 02:53 pmhttp://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/7813791.stm: "But for every £500 they have saved over [£6000], the authorities assume they earn £1 per week in "tariff income" and reduce the benefit payments accordingly."
£1/week/£500 is 10.9%, a significantly better deal than Madoff!
Changing that figure to 25p would seem a nice boost to poor pensioners in next year's budget; I think that a truly honorable government should also commit to providing an investment which pays the "tariff income", at least on sums up to that on which the tariff income equals the State pension, and that would provide the right incentive to keep the assumed rate of tariff income sensible.
£1/week/£500 is 10.9%, a significantly better deal than Madoff!
Changing that figure to 25p would seem a nice boost to poor pensioners in next year's budget; I think that a truly honorable government should also commit to providing an investment which pays the "tariff income", at least on sums up to that on which the tariff income equals the State pension, and that would provide the right incentive to keep the assumed rate of tariff income sensible.
no subject
Date: 2009-01-09 10:56 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-01-09 12:31 pm (UTC)This probably gets stronger as you get older. Being poor while young and healthy is mildly inconvenient, being poor, old and sick would be horrible. Since you don't know how long you will live, in early old age you will obviously want to hang on to your cash in case you need it more later.
I'm not weighing in on the 'what shall we do' debate because I agree we should not give benefits to people who don't need them, but also that people shouldn't be disincentivised from keeping moderate amounts back for a rainy day even when they need benefits. It is a difficult balance.